Search found 46624 matches
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 3:48 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
- Replies: 8
- Views: 797
Re: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
AviationVoice.wav That's Effect > Equalization: Telephone Effect > Distortion > Leveler, level 5 ... twice. That's the push and then you do everything else in theater. Adjust Leveler as needed for more or less gritty distortion. Leveler was retained from earlier Audacity versions because it works e...
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 3:22 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
- Replies: 8
- Views: 797
Re: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
Oh. That's not SSB. That's Taxi Voice.
Effect > Distortion > Leveler at maximum setting, multiple times.
Also see:
Roger Air France 26 Clear for departure runway two-niner.
Same effect.
Koz
Effect > Distortion > Leveler at maximum setting, multiple times.
Also see:
Roger Air France 26 Clear for departure runway two-niner.
Same effect.
Koz
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 3:06 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
- Replies: 8
- Views: 797
Re: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
http://www.hamuniverse.com/ssbaudio.mp3
About 30 seconds in, the transmission starts to "miss it" and you get the sound of tuning.
Koz
About 30 seconds in, the transmission starts to "miss it" and you get the sound of tuning.
Koz
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 2:58 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
- Replies: 8
- Views: 797
Re: How to simulate single sideband modulation effect
Yes. However, to theatrically "sell" the effect, you have to miss it a couple of times as the camera zooms into the operator setting the receiver, first too high and then too low and then hit it. Single Sideband has no carrier to automatically tell the receiver what to do, so it's up to th...
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 2:32 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
- Replies: 21
- Views: 830
Re: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
I can well imagine that needing to do ACX Check every ten minutes is extraordinarily difficult. Not that the software can't easily devine the peaks and loudness (RMS), it can, but to measure noise, it needs to have 3/4 second of pure, clean room tone to measure, each time it runs. These are from the...
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 2:20 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
- Replies: 21
- Views: 830
Re: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
See?
1860 seconds (next to the bottom) comes out to a 31 minute mono (one blue wave) sound track.
Koz
1860 seconds (next to the bottom) comes out to a 31 minute mono (one blue wave) sound track.
Koz
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 1:06 am
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
- Replies: 21
- Views: 830
Re: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
The ACX Check time limit is 37 minutes. Not 10. If you run out of poop at 10 minutes (technical term) then you either have a wussy computer (technical term) or you have several Apps running all at the same time taking up memory and resources. I got a 30 minute test track to check just now and I didn...
- Tue Jan 22, 2019 8:27 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: Hard P sound...
- Replies: 4
- Views: 365
Re: Hard P sound...

She's about a power fist away from the wind screen.
If the volume drops down too far if you do that, you might try the off-center thing.
Koz
- Tue Jan 22, 2019 7:45 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
- Replies: 21
- Views: 830
Re: Gain vs. Mouthnoises
One of the differences between no filter and one pass should be your mouth noises are less obvious. Did you find that worth the effort? Betsy and Tracy is turning into a reasonable patch between overly harsh and passable without trying to take your voice apart with sibilant patching and other comple...
- Tue Jan 22, 2019 6:06 pm
- Forum: Audiobook Production
- Topic: Editing mouth noise and breaths- help for a beginner
- Replies: 6
- Views: 1472
Re: Editing mouth noise and breaths- help for a beginner
ACX expects all your chapters to match, so no fair treating some chapters different from others. Yet another reason to find your noises. The NT1 is a side-fire microphone. You should be talking into the grill just above the company name, not the end like a rock band microphone. If you got a long eno...