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sound forge splitting (pg. 2)
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| Dirk W. |
I use Nero. Works like a charm as long as I set the pause to 0 seconds. Make sure if you use the technique that I do in Sound Forge That you are actually highlighting the entire part of the song. The easiest way to do this is find the spot where track 1 ends. Place the vertical bar there. Scroll to the beginning of the mix. Instead of trying to highlight the entire song by dragging the mouse, simply place the cursor a little in the gray area (the area before the mix even begins), hold shift and click. This will make sure that you are getting even that little tiny bit of a second that you might be missing when you try highlighting a song (which is probably the reason there appears to be a delay). Cut it, paste it into new, save it and youre golden. Repeat till the splitting is done. I hope that made sense, I guess I could take screenshots....
Believe me though, there is no such thing as a delay whatsoever on my cd. |
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| mrwozat |
tis very strange because I do it that way ;)
when I put all the tracks together again in a new soundforge window its as smooth as the original but it never works on the CD. Your cd burner could be better. |
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| veezee |
ahhh. the joy of having a studio burner.. i hit a button when i drop in a track and it marks it.. so when the cd is finalized, it is all split up.. :)
Jay |
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| Zombie0729 |
he's kind of said the samething as everyone else... i think i'm just going to sack up and buy Acid. :(
mrwozat , i will have to agree with you, i'm not sure what we're doing wrong and to tell you the truth it doesn't make any sense that splitting 1 big wave file and putting it back together would have a glitch, but it does... i guess i'll just use a cue file for now. thanks for all your help guys. |
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| hooj1 |
| Use your markers in soundforge for the tracks then use nero to burn to disc. you have to make sure to edit the burn to be gapless. |
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| Zombie0729 |
| quote: | Originally posted by hooj1
Use your markers in soundforge for the tracks then use nero to burn to disc. you have to make sure to edit the burn to be gapless. |
markers don't seperate tracks... they are simply references for yourself within a track. |
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| Tranc3 |
| I may be mistaken, but I believe the reason Acid escapes the little glitches is because is does a quick fade-out and fade-in. Zoom into a track in Acid and you'll see just how quick it is. |
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| hooj1 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Zombie0729
markers don't seperate tracks... they are simply references for yourself within a track. |
they don't but, when you bring up your mix in nero its sees the markers and makes them into different tracks. |
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| skytribe |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj chex
true... Acid does have that feature, however it's designed for samples not complete sets. |
True, but you just treat your set as one long sample.
Record the set as normal to your hard drive. Open the WAV file in ACiD (remembering to set up your preferences such that any file over xxxMB in size will be opened as disk-based one-shot audio).
Drop in track markers whenever you want, and burn the CD. All done within ACiD. |
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| Zombie0729 |
| i finally got a copy of acid. i will give it a shot, thx guys |
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| IntegraR0064 |
| Just...make a cue file in notepad...it's ridiculously easy....just put the cursor in the right place, make sure the time view is on cd index view....and type in the times... |
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