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-   -   XL2 4 channel 12bit audio ok? (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-xl-gl-series-dv-camcorders/37678-xl2-4-channel-12bit-audio-ok.html)

Scott Aston January 12th, 2005 05:39 PM

XL2 4 channel 12bit audio ok?
 
Hey all,

I was wondering if buying the MA-300 and having 4 (XLR lavalier wireless) mics input to the camera is the 12 bit audio acceptable for broadcast?

Also if anone has any experience editing 12 bit audio in a NLE?

Thanks in advance

Chris Hurd January 12th, 2005 06:11 PM

Well, 12-bit audio is in fact CD-quality sound. The most famous DV camcorder of all, the Sony VX1000, had 12-bit audio and it was used for broadcast all the time.

Richard Hunter January 12th, 2005 06:23 PM

<<<-- Originally posted by Chris Hurd : Well, 12-bit audio is in fact CD-quality sound. The most famous DV camcorder of all, the Sony VX1000, had 12-bit audio and it was used for broadcast all the time. -->>>

Where do you buy your CDs from Chris? :)
CD audio is 16 bit 44.1KHz, the 4 channel audio in the DV Spec is 12 bit 32KHz.

I've tried some 3 channel (on camera mic plus external mic) interview recordings with the XL2, and the sound quality was fine. I have doubts about using it for music recording, but for speech and backgrounds I think there is no problem. Mic placement probably has a much bigger impact on the recording quality than changing from 2 to 4 channels.

Barry Green January 12th, 2005 06:59 PM

Yeah, CD's are 16-bit 44.1khz. DV actually has that as part of the DV spec, but nobody uses it...

Chris is correct, the original VX1000 (the camera that started this whole "DV Revolution") only offered 12-bit 32Khz audio. I would agree with Richard, for dialogue it's fine, but wouldn't be the first choice for music or anything with an extended dynamic range.

Scott Aston January 12th, 2005 07:09 PM

Thanks for the feedback guys..but tell me. Can any NLE edit 12 bit audio? I use Liquid Edition, and so far only audio I see that it supports is 8bit & 16 bit. I have a old VX1000 and have shot and captured using Liquid Edition (just home movie stuff of the kids) but I think it says in the view finder 16bit 48KHz.

Pete Wilie January 12th, 2005 11:01 PM

Quote:

Can any NLE edit 12 bit audio?
Good question Scott. I have seen it reported many times that it is best to stick with 16 bit audio. Otherwise your NLE may have problems in capture, FX, and rendering.

The conventional wisdom, if you have more than two sources to record, is to either use a mixer prior to the camera, or use a separate recording device, like a mini-disk recorder.

OTOH, the BEST way to find out is just try it! Record some 4-channel audio on your XL2, load it into LE and see what happens. If you do, please let us know the results.

Shoot for the cut,
Pete

Richard Hunter January 12th, 2005 11:16 PM

I've edited the XL2 12 bit audio in Vegas without any problems. When I get a chance, I will try it in Premiere and Edius too, and post the results.

Barry Green January 13th, 2005 12:51 AM

Quote:

I have a old VX1000 and have shot and captured using Liquid Edition (just home movie stuff of the kids) but I think it says in the view finder 16bit 48KHz.
When playing back from Liquid Edition out to the camera, right? The VX1000 is capable of playing back 48KHz audio, but not of recording it...

Any guess as to what editors support 12-bit would be a guess. Logically all of them should support it; 12-bit 4-channel is part of the DV specification, so if the editor supports capturing DV data, it should support 12-bit audio. But whether that's true in reality is the question, and there's probably no real way to know other than to just test each one.

A. J. deLange January 13th, 2005 07:26 AM

12 bit audio has 24 dB less dynamic range than 16 bit in linear encoding and the 32K sampling limits the highest frequency which can be recorded to 15 kHz. In broadcasting the highest frequency permitted is 15 kHz and the audio is companded so practically speaking 16 bits at 32 kHz should be fine for broadcast. FCP does handle 12 the lower rate just fine. I can't speak to other NLEs.

Ian Corey January 28th, 2005 09:33 PM

No one addressed my obvious question (which I will look for in the XL2 Watchdog list next):

How does one go about capturing all 4 channels? I've looked in the obvious places in FCP HD but cannot find this option.

I'll presume I will have to take a second pass at it, with the audio capture set to CH3/4 the second time. But I don't know...

Chris Hurd January 28th, 2005 09:35 PM

Ian, if you're using Final Cut, you might try asking in our Mac Editing forum. Plenty of FCP users and a few XL2 owners are in there. Good luck,

Kevin Wild January 29th, 2005 02:50 AM

Not to keep this thread going here, but you do have to do a 2nd pass as far as I know. Apple has announced that their next QT upgrade will include 4 channel audio, but for now, it's only 2.

At least I think...

Kevin

Marty Hudzik January 29th, 2005 06:21 AM

A few years back I was using the Canopus DVstorm card and one of their capture modules allowed you to capture all 4 audio tracks simultaneously. Tracks 1-2 were embedded in the .avi asusal and 3-4 were encoded into a .wav file that had the same name.

FWIW. I haven't used the doftware for a few years.

Thomas Wagner January 29th, 2005 10:30 AM

Hello Rebel Pilot
 
I use Avid Xpress there is no problem with capturing all 4 audiotracks simultaneously. I think you can capture up to 8 audio tracks simultaneously. But I never tryed more than four.



Greetings


Thomas

Mark Whittle February 8th, 2005 04:36 AM

My NLE is a Matrox RTX100 Extreme (Premiere Pro 1.5) which allows you to capture the second audio stream simultaneously.

It creates a wav file with the same file name as the avi containing the first audio muxed with the video.

I assumed Premiere Pro could do this alone, without the Matrox bits, but a colleague could not figure out how on his system, so he ended up downloading a program to do it.

I can't remember the name of it - I will post again when I find out.

As far as quality is concerned, PPro conforms all the audio to 32 bit floating and it sounds great.

Mark


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