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DrGonzo55
Known Participant
December 31, 2018
Answered

Manual synchronization - inching up.

  • December 31, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 1686 views

Another question about synchronization:

I clapped three times and here you can see the waveforms of the first two claps.

I am trying to get them to line up exactly and this is why I zoomed in to the highest resolution possible.

Yet there seems to be no tool that would offer me to nudge the claps to be at the exact time, or trim the waveform exactly at the beginning of the first clap.

What are the tools that would allow me to trim the soundtracks to the resolution of one line that is shown?

(I do record WAV files.)

DaVinci Resolve had the ',' and '.' or '<' and '>' shortcut keys. That was pretty handy.

I cannot even trim the soundtracks evenly.

And I made observations about how much sound quality is lost due to this imperfect lineup.

Thank you.

Happy New Year!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer R Neil Haugen

The circled item in your reply is the Program monitor's time-code display. Typically you change which moment/frame you're working or looking at by the timeline's time display.

This changes where the current time indicator is located, the CTI. Or playhead.

You can select a clip, audio or video, and "nudge" it forward/backward by keyboard shortcuts. Open the Keyboard Shortcuts panel, search for "nudge".

To change the timing of an audio clip, right- click, modify and select the option you need.

Neil

1 reply

R Neil Haugen
Legend
December 31, 2018

I would imagine the timeline is set to display in video frame units. Click the 3 bar menu for the timeline and select display audio units.

You can't adjust in partial video frames, so with that controlling the timeline you can only move by full frames at however many frames per second you have.

Audio time units allow much finer tweaking as needed for working with audio.

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
DrGonzo55
DrGonzo55Author
Known Participant
January 1, 2019

And still,

is there any way I can change the number for how much a track was stretched or moved,

the same way I can type in a number for the playhead position?

I started using zoom, razor, slide, rate stretch, learned their shortcut keys,

and yet I am still unable to get that stretch number to change precisely,

by typing in numbers or by pressing some arrows.

Thank you.

R Neil Haugen
R Neil HaugenCorrect answer
Legend
January 1, 2019

The circled item in your reply is the Program monitor's time-code display. Typically you change which moment/frame you're working or looking at by the timeline's time display.

This changes where the current time indicator is located, the CTI. Or playhead.

You can select a clip, audio or video, and "nudge" it forward/backward by keyboard shortcuts. Open the Keyboard Shortcuts panel, search for "nudge".

To change the timing of an audio clip, right- click, modify and select the option you need.

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...