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Another Premiere pro question...
I have just exported a short 10 minute clip/film out of Premiere so I can author it into a DVD and its in the windows media player AVI file.
Almost all of the onboard camera sound is removed as it was about cars at a show etc and music put on the audio 2 track to run through the length of the clip with about 3 minutes on onboard audio, at these parts on Premiere it runs fine but when I play it back on the media player it cracks and hisses (the exported clip) I thought it might have been my own computer speakers so brned it to dvd but it does the same thing, has anyone got some idea of whats wrong? Many thanks Paul |
This can be caused by volume leves that are too high. In Premiere Pro, open the Audio Mixer if it is not already open (Window>Audio Mixer), and play back your project. If the audio level goes above 0 db, then reduce the volume. In fact, it would probably be a good idea to make sure there are no audio peaks above -12 db. I know that my Samsung DVD player (or perhaps the sound sound system, I'm not sure which) had a problem with audio levels approaching 0 db on DVDs. Now I master my DVDs with sound levels no higher than -12 db, and I've had no more problems.
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Thank you Christopher,
I'll give that ago. The sounds are very high on that clip as its a car revving up. I'll let you know what happens and thanks again for your help. Paul |
Your right it peaking out at the very red, do you reduce the master to -12 or that seperate audio track, and do you do this all on the audio mixer?
Paul |
When I mix audio in Premiere Pro, I reduce the volume on individual clips to just under 0 db should they peak over 0 db. Once that is done, before I export the file for DVD I reduce the Master channel in the Audio Mixer by -12 db.
Here is how to reduce the volume on an individual clip in the Timeline window (from the Premiere Pro help file). To edit a clip or track's audio levels in the Timeline window: 1. In the Timeline window, expand a track's view, if necessary, by clicking the expansion triangle next to the track name. 2. Click the Show Keyframes button Show Keyframes button , and choose Show Clip Volume or Show Track Volume from the menu that appears. 3. Use the pen tool to adjust the level uniformly (if keyframes have not been added) or to add or edit keyframes. |
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if you recorded the motor sound with the agc off, you could have over-driven the recorded sound past 0 db, which would have ruined it... but that would have explained why it's too loud. the goal is to have the audio set correctly before anything is exported... i try to use the digital audio meters on my mackie mixer, but ultimately i think that you want a quality set of powered vu meters... it's probably a good idea to never depend on the editing software to set audio levels, and of course never try to match audio levels strictly by ear alone. |
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Every dvd I have created has never required such drastic intervention. All (most) have all flavours of audio from band to voice, music tracks and ambient / shop floor all peaking to within -.05 db. Don't your clients mention that they have to way turn up the volume to listen to your work? |
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The reason I reduced by -12 db (and not something like -6 db) was something I had read on the Adobe User to User forums recommended -12 db. |
I did a quick search on the Adobe Premiere Pro User to User forum on the subject. Read the two threads linked below for an explanation. Pay special attention to the last post on the second thread. This is more complicated than I thought; my head is starting to hurt...
http://www.adobeforums.com/cgi-bin/w...36@.2cceddd9/0 http://www.adobeforums.com/cgi-bin/w...2050@.2ccd6c5c Short story: The correct audio input and output level depends on your source and destination, plus the peak level Premiere Pro expects. You have no control over the level the audio comes in (if you are using IEEE 1394), but you do have control over the output. But again, you must know what level your source treats as peak, and what your destination media treats as peak. This a subject every Premiere Pro user (and every prosumer/pro NLE user, for that matter) should be aware of. (Oh, and by the way, Premiere Pro's audio reference tone is at -12 db.) Read the threads linked above. This is important! |
Thanks for your help Christopher,
I'll try this out and let you know how it sounds. Paul |
Thanks again Christopher,
That worked a treat. Paul |
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this appears to be an issue with premiere. |
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Problem number one could have been avoided in the first place had video equipment manufacturers standardized on a single audio reference level. Problems two and three are clearly Adobe's fault, though number two would never have arisen had problem one been avoided. If your video equipment and workflow happens to be compatible with Premiere Pro's audio reference level, you may never see any audio issues. I wonder how other editing software handles audio reference levels? While an important issue, this seems to be a rare subject. 0 db is thrown around as the "official" level, but this is evidently not the case when it comes to video equipment. Please, read the threads from the Adobe forum before commenting. |
Audio wav or dv25 embedded at 48000 16 bit...
The track is the track. Bring in a wav file file that has been normalized in your audio editor to 100% and there is no headroom but there is also no peaking. If the audio track from your firewire captured dv25 tape has no peaks and hovers around -2 or -3, then the export to your authoring program in the form of an avi will have no peak either.
To back the master track at export down to -12db as a absolute necessity is not a SOP. Perhaps some of the anecdotal evidence in the Adobe forum points to this, but I have never seen this as the de facto method to go from edit to author when creating the finished work on a dvd. If this can be substantiated, then I have been creating with the wrong set of standards for 6 years. How could we all be so horribly misguided in the way we manage our audio by stepping above the suggested -12db? I think you might have a hardware issue that is shared by others in search of a technical resolution. |
From Television Sound: The Basics (http://www.cybercollege.com/diglevels.htm)
"The optimum audio levels for digital audio signals are different than those for analog signals. Whereas the 0dB peak setting is the standard operating level (SOL) for analog systems, for digital equipment the maximum level (in North America) is typically -20dB. With both analog and digital signals it comes down to headroom. Headroom is defined as the safe area beyond the SOL (standard operating level) point. With a SOL of -20dB, (which is typically the standard in North America) this leaves another 20dB for headroom. European countries tend to allow for -18dB of headroom. " ____________________________________ From Broadcast Engineering magazine, "Audio signal distribution and level measurements" (http://advertisers.broadcastengineering.com/ar/broadcasting_audio_signal_distribution) “...all audio levels have a negative-dBFS value, with the SOL set normally to -20 dBFS indicating that the equipment has a 20 dB headroom.” Quote:
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Next I extracted the Dolby Digital audio from my latest DVD (mastered to -12db). I used the same procedure with this as I did with the audio from The Patriot. I then imported it into Premiere Pro and checked it on the VU meters. Again, none of it goes over -12 db, as expected, though most of my audio is pretty close to -12 db, unlike The Patriot sound track. Thus, the sound track for The Patriot and the sound track from my DVD don’t peak above -12 db. In fact, my sound track looks to be hotter on average than The Patriot sound track. Quote:
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Wow!
What a peice of research Chris! Thanks for the tech data and the experimentation.
We'll have to get to the bottom of this. Thanks again! Ty? D.S.E.? Your comments? |
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chris, your testing methodology is flawed... if you want to accurately compare audio levels, import the files into an audio editor that gives you a visual representation of the peaks.
i'm certainly no audio engineer, but afaik, digital audio level meters as found on hardware like the mackie are not nearly as accurate as powered analog vu meters... and attempting to do it with software would be the worst case scenario... i believe that the inaccuracies with digital metering has something to do with the audio signal being averaged, instead of representing true peaks(??)... or maybe it's the other way around, lol :-) the fact remains that premiere is apparently NOT handling audio correctly, you should never have to knock the entire track down like that... and this thread is even more confusing because paul has not weighed in with a definitive statement about whether or not his audio recording was clipped at the 0 db point. it's easy to check for clipping when the audio track is opened up in adobe audition, which should be a mandatory step in troubleshooting an issue like this. |
Dan,
At this point I'm not too concerned about any possible audio issues with Premiere Pro. What I want to know is what should the SOL be for recording, editing, and exporting digital audio. That was why I undertook that test. You claim "you should never have to knock the entire track down like that". Well, maybe not, though Premiere Pro mixes audio in 32-bits, which evidently means there is more headroom for audio inside the app than when exporting to a DV file. This is not Premiere's fault. Further, you did not even try to address the articles I found, one from a broadcast engineer magazine, which stated the SOL for digital audio should be -20 db. In that case one should knock the entire audio track down, at least before exporting. Quote:
Even if Premiere Pro's audio meters and audio waveforms are not entirely accurate, they should be at least good enough for a rough comparison between two audio sources. As stated earlier, I had knocked down my DVD audio track to -12 db. It was still at that level when I imported it again after converting it from the Dolby Digital file; comparing my soundtrack to The Patriot soundtrack, it was very clear that the average level of The Patriot soundtrack was definitely below the average level of my soundtrack. If Premiere Pro's audio meters and audio waveforms are so inaccurate that even a relative comparison like this cannot be trusted, then they are just about worthless. |
what we are trying to tell you is that if the camera recorded digital audio at the correct level, you should not have to knock it down, o.k.? it should not be distorting, because it's not over the 0 db mark... and in fact, it most likely was recorded at a level well under the 0 db mark, because that's where a good agc would keep it.
i'm not sure why you'd post comparisons between digital and analog, since we are recording and editing in digital, but your point about the -20 db standard is a good one... i did some digging, you can download a -20 db wave reference file here: http://www.digido.com/portal/pmodule...der_page_id=59 ...bob katz has also written a ton of good info about digital loudness levels on that website. please let us know what happens with that file when imported into premiere... the other thing that i would suggest is to first import that file, and some of these other files, into audition to compare the levels... also convert 16-bit files to 32-bit files within audition, and you'll be able to prove to yourself what happens to the db levels when you do that. |
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If we put our heads together hopefully we can figure this out. |
i was referring to your dvd audio test files, vs. that -20db reference file... how they compare in various editors.
i think that there is actually an audio db standard with dolby stuff(??), which could explain why both of your dvd audio test files were at comparable levels... just guessing, i don't know what ac3 encoding standard you used... i typically shut off as much of the preset as possible. |
Wow, I just finished reading the audio article you linked. It was incredibly informative. Absolutely great. This man knows his audio. I can't recommend it enough.
I didn't understand all of it, but here's the gist I got. Apparently, one should use a negative db point for the average sound level. Anything above that is considered headroom for peak sounds (explosions, etc.) up to 0 db. He says that with the new 24 bit systems one doesn't need to go all the way up to 0 db. For film, the SOL was apparently derived from the Star Wars films, and is approximately -20 db. The further up the scale the SOL is, the more compressed dynamically the final mix will sound. His proposed standard for sound mixes looks good. From what he writes it looks like one should be able to set up monitor speakers to use his standard for mixing even without a sound level meter. After reading his article and getting a much better understanding of the correct way to mix audio, I realize my most recent program mix (and probably all the ones I have done using audio meters) must sound pretty compressed dynamically, even when reduced by -12 db when mastered for DVD. The waveforms I looked at previously (The Patriot and my program) confirmed this. Most of my audio was in the same general region, while The Patriot soundtrack varied much more. I hope to be able to give some audio test results from Premiere Pro and Audition soon. Whew! There is so much to learn. |
Dan,
Okay, finally got the tests done. Here is what I did. I imported the -20 db file you found on that Web site into both Audition and Premiere Pro. In both programs the levels hit about -11 db. Rather odd. I converted the audio tracks of three movies to wave files using BeSweet v1.4 via the BeLight 0.21 GUI. I used the default setting of -3db for "LFE to LR channels", with "Output Mode" set to stereo (I had also tried an LFE to LR level of 0db, but that ended up lowering the resulting levels, so I didn’t use the 0db setting). Below are screen shots of the audio waveforms from Adobe Audition 1.5 (WARNING: Large image files. I don't recommend opening them unless you are on broadband). The first two are entire soundtracks; the last two are only portions (it wasn't intentional; that was just way I had access to them). The Adobe Audition window has the decibel levels marked in it, so you can see what the levels are. Your browser will probably not open the images full size, but you should be able to click on them to zoom in. Link: Gods and Generals audio waveform Link: The Passion of the Christ audio waveform Link: The Patriot audio waveform Link: My project audio waveform I also tried opening a 16-bit file extracted from an audio CD. I examined it at its native 16-bits in Audition, and dropped it into a 32-bit Adobe Audition time line (Audition converted it to 32-bits). I didn't notice any significant differences between the two; both hit the same peak (-1 db). |
nice job! i had a reply typed up, and the computer ate it, lol!!
the gist of it was that i thought that the dolby encoding is tweaking those readings heavily... the total spl of 5 dolby tracks vs. total spl of 2 stereo tracks may not be accurately represented on a timeline, because there aren't the same number of speakers. wrt the -20db target for tv audio... the 10/9/05 issue of tv technology has a user report from the engineer of a headend cable facitility, who had to get a dolby broadcast loudness meter to normalize the subjective dialog of all incoming sources before sending the programming on to his subscribers... so people at home watching tv don't have to ride the audio when switching channels... which means that most of the people creating and transmitting tv audio are not adhering to the -20db target level. |
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the tvtechnology website did not have the article, probably because it was a user report, but the lm100 referred to in the link you posted was indeed the equipment in question... unfortunately it appears to be relevant to dolby audio only(??).
wrt premiere and what we have seen so far... if you encode the dvd audio to dolby standards, it will apparently limit the audio spl... it is adhering to the one common standard audio level that we were looking for, depending on how it's set up in the ac3 encoder. so why are these people having problems with audio in premiere? i think that you showed that the audio levels are not changed when the file is brought into premiere for editing, which is just how it should be... and the vegas ac3 encoder should create the same spl as the premiere ac3 encoder, if the settings are the same. |
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