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I've been experiencing this bug for a long time now (at least 2 years).
When I add volume level keyframes to an audio clip, they're usually linear by default, so I'll right click on them and choose a different interpolation if needed.
In the example below, I changed the third keyframe to Ease Out - all the others are linear.
As expected, the volume fades according to the keyframes and will continue to do so for as long as Premiere open. But, when I export the sequence, the audio in the export is completely different (volume increases and decreases unexpectedly), and there is no evidence in Premiere that anything has changed - the volume levels look and sound normal.
It's only when I quit Premiere and relaunch it that I can see and hear what's happening. The picture below is the same audio clip after relaunching Premiere.
So, despite the clip looking and sounding normal in the original session (first picture), it actually exports according to the changes that have occurred in the second picture, and those changes are not evident at any point during the original session - only after Premiere is relaunched.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Cheers.
Hi @the outward spiral - Thanks for submitting your bug report. We need a few more details to try to help with the issue.
Please see, How do I write a bug report?
Sorry for the frustration.
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Hi @the outward spiral - Thanks for submitting your bug report. We need a few more details to try to help with the issue.
Please see, How do I write a bug report?
Sorry for the frustration.
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CPU - Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-10885H CPU @ 2.40GHz 2.40 GHz
GPU - NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000, 16 GB VRAM (GDDR6)
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Hi @the outward spiral ,
Would you say that this only happens with Mp3 audio files? I have been using camera audio and .wav files and have not been able to reproduce this error yet. You mentioned you have to export the sequence first and then close out of the program to see the changes happen. Does that mean you are exporting out media and what type of export are you making before you close out and notice the problem? Trying to see if I am missing something to get this recreated.
Thank you
Ian
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"Would you say that this only happens with Mp3 audio files?"
Can't say.
"You mentioned you have to export the sequence first and then close out of the program to see the changes happen."
No, exporting is not part of the cause. Exiting and relaunching premiere only makes the issue show itself visually and audibly during real-time playback, whereas, during the original session when the keyframes are added, the issue only shows itself audibly in exports - not during real-time playback.
"..what type of export are you making before you close out and notice the problem?"
HEVC