- #SONY SOUND FORGE PRO 10 MP3 FORMAT NOT RENDERING MOVIE#
- #SONY SOUND FORGE PRO 10 MP3 FORMAT NOT RENDERING SOFTWARE#
Examples of codecs that Vegas cannot play are DivX, Xvid and particular Apple Codecs. So if all your settings in Vegas are correct and you are getting no audio, then you can bet that the video you are using was made with a non-standard codec.
#SONY SOUND FORGE PRO 10 MP3 FORMAT NOT RENDERING SOFTWARE#
Because of this reason you will find that Software companies limit the amount of 3rd Party codecs they support, otherwise the cost of their software would become too expensive. Often these more unusual codecs have licensing agreements attached to them, which basically means they charge other companies for the right to use these special codecs in their Software or devices. Many of these codecs are invented by a particular company and are designed only for use in the devices they make. There are a huge amount of different video and audio codecs and formats in use Worldwide. You have the Project Properties set to 5.1 Surround Sound and are rendering to normal Stereo output OR vise versa. You have the wrong Audio Device or Speakers selected inside the Vegas Preferences for "Audio Devices".
![sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering](https://windows-cdn.softpedia.com/screenshots/Sound-Forge_2.png)
You have accidentally MUTED one of the Sound Controls on the Vegas Desktop. The settings in the program and/or device you used to record your video/audio with, are not compatible with Vegas. The Video Codec of your source media is not a codec/format that Sony Vegas supports. The main causes for this problem are the following:
#SONY SOUND FORGE PRO 10 MP3 FORMAT NOT RENDERING MOVIE#
(see link in my previous post).Vegas Movie Studio Q: Why is no Sound coming from my Videos on the Vegas Timeline? Answer: There can be a couple of different reasons why you may not be getting any sound from a Video, once you place it onto the Vegas Timeline. You may find that using -27 dB, which will sound slightly quieter, is not clipping your high range, which you can then compensate for by turning up the volume! But for film I would not recommend any of those settings. For a music video I think I might be inclined to use -31 DN and DRC set to none, which will yield an identical sound to a wave file of the same audio, but it would be good to analyze the audio first and make sure no clipping is going on. Don't feel bad, Aedipuss, my original writeup here was also wrong in a number of ways, which is why I have edited my previous post.Ĭ627627, it sounds like you did the right thing with your dialogue normalization setting, assuming you changed the dynamic range compression settings to none. By coincidence because dialogue tends to go mostly through the center speaker, you will notice the most substantial changes there on a 5.1 film audio track, but dialogue normalization still very much applies to stereo audio tracks.
![sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering](https://www.magix.com/fileadmin/user_upload/Produkte/Pro/SOUND_FORGE_Pro_14/New-features/i_fca112/sound-forge-pro-14-whats-new-screenshot-int.jpg)
Edited menu sounded about the same as the original when Dialog normalization was set to the most extreme value of -31 dB.Īedipuss is simultaneously right and wrong. Edited menu sounded quieter than the original when Dialog normalization was set to -27 dB.Ģ.
![sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/9aoUmP4txY0/mqdefault.jpg)
I only made slight modifications, and did not wish the perceived level of volume to be different.ġ. I wanted the menu to sound as loud as the original. This was not about editing a movie where the intricacies of footsteps vs. It did not sound as loud as the original. With each edit, as I recall, the overall menu volume sounded quieter. I was editing an Iron Maiden music DVD menu and naturally I wanted it to sound just as loud as the original. Then you can convert back to ac3 with whatever dialogue normalization level you want! Hope this helps clear up some confusion for people. Convert to a lossless format like wave, w64, or PCM.
![sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering sony sound forge pro 10 mp3 format not rendering](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-I9FrGpNGLFI/Tcv2xG5567I/AAAAAAAAAP8/3sa2TITYy_4/s1600/it_photo_136303_52.jpg)
When it comes to editing, you should never edit in AC3. So to answer your original question c627627, it really depends on what is specifically happening in the sound file you are listening to in terms of whether it sounds louder or quieter at different dialogue normalization levels, and it depends on how your sound system is setup that you are listening on.