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I'm editing a critical project, and suddenly and for no apparent reason, I lose audio. I can see the meters moving, but no sound. This has been an intermittent problem that seems to have become permanent. I'm running Windows 7 Home Premium on a 64-bit HP PC. I'm using Adobe Premiere Elements 2018. HOW DO I GET AUDIO BACK? If I don't get an answer soon, I must revert to Corel Video Studio Pro just so I can get a presentation for my board of directors by their Aug 25 meeting.
Solo is not any help.
Thanks,
Tom
Can it be your operating system? On my computer the Windows 10 audio will sometimes randomly mute.
Within Premiere Elements' Preference section there are some audio hardware choices. Try changing them. Each machine is different. On my machine, sometimes they get changed by something within Windows and I have to change it back.
Another issue can be Dolby Audio in AVCHD files. What format and what camera is the troublesome footage coming from?
A last option is to initiate a customer support ch
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Can it be your operating system? On my computer the Windows 10 audio will sometimes randomly mute.
Within Premiere Elements' Preference section there are some audio hardware choices. Try changing them. Each machine is different. On my machine, sometimes they get changed by something within Windows and I have to change it back.
Another issue can be Dolby Audio in AVCHD files. What format and what camera is the troublesome footage coming from?
A last option is to initiate a customer support chat option here: Contact Customer Care
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Thanks!
Changing audio hardware choices under preferences seems to work in Windows 7. It said my Logitech wireless headset (my preferred choice to edit) was not working, but it offered me another choice for Logitech wireless head set, so I chose that. I got sound! ... out of my computer’s built in speakers. Hm. I chose my computer's speakers as the default hardware – and got sound in my headset.
My takeaway is to ignore the name of the audio hardware device and just choose the device that works, regardless of the name. The same might go for the microphone, but in this case, choosing my wireless microphone made my wireless microphone work. Go figure.
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Thank you so much!
Changing audio hardware choices under preferences seems to work in Windows 7. It said my Logitech wireless headset (my preferred choice to edit) was not working, but it offered me another choice for Logitech wireless head set, so I chose that. I got sound! ... out of my computer’s built in speakers. Hm. I chose my computer’s speakers as the default hardware – and got sound in my headset.
My takeaway is to ignore the name of the audio hardware device and just choose the device that works, regardless of the name. The same might go for the microphone, but in this case, choosing my wireless microphone made my wireless microphone work. Go figure.
Thank you again for your quick and clear answer. I was really stressed out.
This information really should be in the Adobe documentation troubleshooting section.
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Happy to hear you got it working. Good luck on your critical project for your board!