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#16
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Lowering audio volume with Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorderresult distorted audio quality?
dadiOH wrote:
Paul in Houston TX wrote: Ant wrote: On 12/26/2010 5:03 PM PT, Paul in Houston TX typed: Is it me or does lowering my WAV's audio volume result in an updated Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorder? Is this a bug in this program or something else? Also, does anyone know of a good free audio program that will do batches to lower audio volume in a bunch of old WAV files? Doing one by one is a pain in the butt/abdomen. Thank you in advance. I don;t know anything about SP3 soundrecorder. I use Goldwave for recording and Audiograbber for batch normalizing. Is normalizing same as lowering audio volume? I am not familiar with that one. I just realized that Audiograbber won't do what you want since it only grabs sound files from CD's. I don't know if it would see *.wav or not. It will. A long time ago I used FakeCD to create fake cd drives. There is probably a small program that will run on XP that would do the same. |
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#17
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Lowering audio volume with Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorder result distorted audio quality?
"Paul in Houston TX" wrote in message ... dadiOH wrote: Paul in Houston TX wrote: Ant wrote: On 12/26/2010 5:03 PM PT, Paul in Houston TX typed: Is it me or does lowering my WAV's audio volume result in an updated Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorder? Is this a bug in this program or something else? Also, does anyone know of a good free audio program that will do batches to lower audio volume in a bunch of old WAV files? Doing one by one is a pain in the butt/abdomen. Thank you in advance. I don;t know anything about SP3 soundrecorder. I use Goldwave for recording and Audiograbber for batch normalizing. Is normalizing same as lowering audio volume? I am not familiar with that one. I just realized that Audiograbber won't do what you want since it only grabs sound files from CD's. I don't know if it would see *.wav or not. It will. A long time ago I used FakeCD to create fake cd drives. There is probably a small program that will run on XP that would do the same. I suspect you could run them thru AudioGrabber after first changing the Normalization value which I believe is 98% by default, e.g. change it to 60% would result in an output file with a reduced volume level. AudioGrabber allows drag-n-drop for multipule files so that's not an issue. What I'm unsure of is will it process mp3 files or would you first have to convert them back to wav as I've never needed to "go back" or if I thought I might need/want to I kept the original wav also. |
#18
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Lowering audio volume with Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorderresult distorted audio quality?
pjp wrote:
"Paul in Houston TX" wrote in message ... dadiOH wrote: Paul in Houston TX wrote: Ant wrote: On 12/26/2010 5:03 PM PT, Paul in Houston TX typed: Is it me or does lowering my WAV's audio volume result in an updated Windows XP Pro. SP3's Sound Recorder? Is this a bug in this program or something else? Also, does anyone know of a good free audio program that will do batches to lower audio volume in a bunch of old WAV files? Doing one by one is a pain in the butt/abdomen. Thank you in advance. I don;t know anything about SP3 soundrecorder. I use Goldwave for recording and Audiograbber for batch normalizing. Is normalizing same as lowering audio volume? I am not familiar with that one. I just realized that Audiograbber won't do what you want since it only grabs sound files from CD's. I don't know if it would see *.wav or not. It will. A long time ago I used FakeCD to create fake cd drives. There is probably a small program that will run on XP that would do the same. I suspect you could run them thru AudioGrabber after first changing the Normalization value which I believe is 98% by default, e.g. change it to 60% would result in an output file with a reduced volume level. AudioGrabber allows drag-n-drop for multipule files so that's not an issue. What I'm unsure of is will it process mp3 files or would you first have to convert them back to wav as I've never needed to "go back" or if I thought I might need/want to I kept the original wav also. I think Audiograbber and Goldwave both expand to *.wav in RAM for processing and then compress to mp3 for saving, if stored as mp3. |
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