View Full Version : Error in Movie Maker 2.1 - Audio sample rate - DV-AVI
Strunki
May 17th 06, 02:46 PM
It seems that Movie Maker 2.1 erroneously reports that any DV-AVI captured
with it
has an audio sample rate of 32 khz. When in fact all other video editing
programs such as Adobe Premiere, Virtual Dub, etc. report a correct sample
rate of 48 khz.
It seems that Movie Maker is wrong not the other programs because
when I open the resulting AVI file with an audio editor capable of
interpreting
AVIs I get slowed down speech. This audio editor interprets the audio signal
at 32 khz as is probably erroneously indicated in the header of the file.
While
the other video editing programs seem clever enough to interpret the audio
signals correctly.
dwiggicb
August 13th 06, 02:17 PM
"Strunki" wrote:
> It seems that Movie Maker 2.1 erroneously reports that any DV-AVI captured
> with it
> has an audio sample rate of 32 khz. When in fact all other video editing
> programs such as Adobe Premiere, Virtual Dub, etc. report a correct sample
> rate of 48 khz.
> It seems that Movie Maker is wrong not the other programs because
> when I open the resulting AVI file with an audio editor capable of
> interpreting
> AVIs I get slowed down speech. This audio editor interprets the audio signal
> at 32 khz as is probably erroneously indicated in the header of the file.
> While
> the other video editing programs seem clever enough to interpret the audio
> signals correctly.
dwiggicb
August 13th 06, 02:21 PM
i'm new to this newsgroup "stuff", but it seems this is the ONLY place i can
get some answers to problems within movie maker...i don't know if ur problem
is similar to mine or not....when i preview a movie maker project all of the
audio files sound perfect, but when i save the file as a movie and preview
it, the audio clips "skip" and just don't sound right...i'm saving the
projects to a DV-AVI file. any suggestions? I'm making a MAJOR project of
my son's life to be put on DVD. thanks
"Strunki" wrote:
> It seems that Movie Maker 2.1 erroneously reports that any DV-AVI captured
> with it
> has an audio sample rate of 32 khz. When in fact all other video editing
> programs such as Adobe Premiere, Virtual Dub, etc. report a correct sample
> rate of 48 khz.
> It seems that Movie Maker is wrong not the other programs because
> when I open the resulting AVI file with an audio editor capable of
> interpreting
> AVIs I get slowed down speech. This audio editor interprets the audio signal
> at 32 khz as is probably erroneously indicated in the header of the file.
> While
> the other video editing programs seem clever enough to interpret the audio
> signals correctly.
Cari \(MS-MVP\)
August 13th 06, 06:46 PM
To both of you, the correct newsgroup for MovieMaker problems is
microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker
--
Cari (MS-MVP) Windows Client - Printing & Imaging
www.coribright.com/Windows
"dwiggicb" > wrote in message
...
> i'm new to this newsgroup "stuff", but it seems this is the ONLY place i
> can
> get some answers to problems within movie maker...i don't know if ur
> problem
> is similar to mine or not....when i preview a movie maker project all of
> the
> audio files sound perfect, but when i save the file as a movie and preview
> it, the audio clips "skip" and just don't sound right...i'm saving the
> projects to a DV-AVI file. any suggestions? I'm making a MAJOR project
> of
> my son's life to be put on DVD. thanks
>
> "Strunki" wrote:
>
>> It seems that Movie Maker 2.1 erroneously reports that any DV-AVI
>> captured
>> with it
>> has an audio sample rate of 32 khz. When in fact all other video editing
>> programs such as Adobe Premiere, Virtual Dub, etc. report a correct
>> sample
>> rate of 48 khz.
>> It seems that Movie Maker is wrong not the other programs because
>> when I open the resulting AVI file with an audio editor capable of
>> interpreting
>> AVIs I get slowed down speech. This audio editor interprets the audio
>> signal
>> at 32 khz as is probably erroneously indicated in the header of the file.
>> While
>> the other video editing programs seem clever enough to interpret the
>> audio
>> signals correctly.
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