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hi
is there a way to organizate my vst plugins ?
maybe with another vst plugin , in short to have all according a manual sort order
and is there a way to use more in the rack effects ? i guess the max for audition is 16
thanks
happy new year
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Giovannivolontè wrote:
is there a way to organizate my vst plugins ?
maybe with another vst plugin , in short to have all according a manual sort order
No, there is no facility within Audition to do this, and it wouldn't be an appropriate task for a VST plugin to carry out.
and is there a way to use more in the rack effects ? i guess the max for audition is 16
No, 16 is the limit. I'm slightly intrigued as to what you have recorded that is SO bad that it requires even 16 effects to treat it, never mind any more. Would you care to enlighten us?
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No, there is no facility within Audition to do this, and it wouldn't be an appropriate task for a VST plugin to carry out.
hi
i have some plugins like acon suite , i would like to call quickly , i guess shortcuts are the only way
about
No, 16 is the limit.
it was only a question , never had the need of more then 2 o 3 effects
thanks
happy new year
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Why would ever need to use more than a few effects in the Effects Rack let alone more than 16? If you need more you can always send the Track to a Bus and add another Rack of sixteen there.
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If you need more you can always send the Track to a Bus and add another Rack of sixteen there
hi
what do you mean send the track to a bus?
i have now audition cc running i'm in the multi track , i can 't see how send a track to a Bus
and what is a Buss?
sorry my native language is not english , and my audition is not in english
thanks
happy new year!
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A Bus is a way of grouping multiple tracks together for occasions where you want to apply the same effect on several different tracks.
You set this up on the Edit Panel at the left end of each track in your multrack session--it's the drop down box with the left facing arrow. It'll almost certainly be set to Master by default. Click on that and it will offer "Bus" as one of the options. The first time you do it, you'll be offered the option of "Create New Bus". After that, you can select the bus you have created already or make another bus.
The result of this will be another "Track" down at the bottom of your session which gives you control of any tracks added to that bus. If you want them all to have the same effects, just add it to the bus and the effect will be applied there rather than to individual tracks.
A bus is also useful in the mix by allowing you to group related tracks together. For example, if you have 8 tracks of backing vocals, you can set the balance the normal way then control the balance between lead and backing vocals just by adjusting the level on the bus.
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hi
thanks
but use it for the same audio on different tracks ,it's unless
if i have the same audio on track 1 and track 2 , the volume is different , it does increase the volume
thanks a lot , i use audition , but always find new features ,maybe because i use it seldom
happy new year
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If you have the same audio on tracks one and two (though not sure why you'd want to do that), you can still set levels on each track, add individual effects, etc. etc. and THEN send the tracks to a bus where you can add any effects you want on both--or use it as an easy way to finalise a mix. For example, working on a video, say, I might have one bus for all dialogue, another for sound effects and another for music. I can set the dialogue balance so all voices match on their own tracks, then only have to adjust a few bus faders to mix dialogue, FX and music even if each of those sections is ten tracks each.
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hi
i know but i don't know how much the volume does increase having the same audio tracks on 2 different tracks
and i don't trust of my ears to obtain the same original volume , my audio in this case is music
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If you have the same audio on two mono tracks and you add them together by mixing them at equal volume then the mixed audio will be 6dB louder than each individual track. But, as Bob asks, why would you want to have the same audio on two tracks?
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I think we could be more help if you explained what it is that you're trying to do. Is it two identical mono tracks (in which case the "why?" question is still valid or, by any chance, do you have stereo material (i.e. Left and Right channels of the same recording) and want to mix them to a single stereo track.
I'm also still trying to work out why you'd want to use more than 16 effects on the same track. I think the most I've ever used was five or six...and even that many was a highly unusual sound effect for theatre that had to sound, shall we say, strange.
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hi
just to knowledge and to do it , and learn every day something about audition cc
in the past i bought lynda dvd but they are always the same ,i mean they are not specific tutorials ,they teach general tasks
thanks