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Re: ??
| quote: | Originally posted by Dj Spiel
Can you explain step by step? Please. |
i thought i did
after you are done recording save your sound file as a .wav file (Don't convert to Mp3! Only convert the file to an mp3 when you are ready to save the whole sound file as a sound file for keeping on your hard drive).
you will now have one big .wav file.
now there are severaly ways to do this, but this is the quickest.
go to the very begining of your sound file (that window with all those crazy sinusoidal curves put together into one graph).
listen to the recording and find the point on the sound file
theres a scroll bar at the bottom of the window you can use to search forward and backward in the recording. you place your mouse where you want to play and it will put a curser there and you can hit space bar and the file will play. find the point where the first transition starts. scroll around and find the exact time atwhich you want the first track to end and the second track to start. once you find that position. put the cursor there and highlite that point all the way to the begining of the recording. you just highlite it in a similar fashion as you would a text document. now go to edit->then cut
this will cut out that selection from the master recording (don't worry, the changes aren't final until you save that recording file).
now you go to file->new
then you click in that new window that opens, put the cursor in there and select paste
now that selection you made from the very begining to the point you chose as the end of the first track and the begining of the second track will be placed in that window. now make sure that the new window is the active window (shown by the fact that its title bar is blue). and go to file->save as save this file as track01.wav.
you can now close that file.
now your master recording will start at the point you decided track 2 should be begin. so now follow the same process as you did for the first track to obtain track 2.
once you have all the tracks saved you can go into nero (or whatever burning software you use) and select all those tracks to put on your CD. Make sure in your properties of your burning software that Disc At Once is selected, this will tell the software to not put the 2.00 second delay between the tracks. also (this is how it works for my nero) you have to select the individual tracks you placed into your new CD compilation and go to properties and make sure that nero didn't add an additional 2.00 seconds to end of the sound file.
hope this clarifies things. 
good luck
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