Playback is at uneven rate
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 5:22 pm
Hi,
I am using a Blue Snowball mic on Ubuntu 10.04 and Windows 7 systems and running Audacity 1.3.12-beta on Dell Inspiron 570 desktop and 1501 laptop machines. I have noticed variation in the playback of recorded audio. It seems to speed up occasionally (without an increase in pitch) and then return to normal. I am recording piano audio so I ran a test in which I played each note on the keyboard at a constant rate starting at the base end. I also played middle C three times to mark it. I have attached a .wav file of the results. Notice that middle C is to the right of the middle of the time line and that the output rate increases as the upper notes are played back (I played them all at the same rate -- as best I could), but the pitches of those notes are correct. I tried this experiment on both machines running Ubuntu and on the Dell 570 running under Windows 7 (using the Audacity beta for that OS) and got the same results. Humm... I wonder what's going on? I looked through the FAQs and didn't see anything that relates to this. I'm new to Audacity so I may not have it set up right...
Thanks...
By the way, as you can tell from the .wav file, this mic has very good fidelity. It is specked at 35Hz to 18kHz. In the low end that's about six keys from the bottom of a piano keyboard, but the recording indicates that it works well all the way down. The upper key is around 4kHz so that's easily covered -- with room to spare for higher pitched instruments.
I am using a Blue Snowball mic on Ubuntu 10.04 and Windows 7 systems and running Audacity 1.3.12-beta on Dell Inspiron 570 desktop and 1501 laptop machines. I have noticed variation in the playback of recorded audio. It seems to speed up occasionally (without an increase in pitch) and then return to normal. I am recording piano audio so I ran a test in which I played each note on the keyboard at a constant rate starting at the base end. I also played middle C three times to mark it. I have attached a .wav file of the results. Notice that middle C is to the right of the middle of the time line and that the output rate increases as the upper notes are played back (I played them all at the same rate -- as best I could), but the pitches of those notes are correct. I tried this experiment on both machines running Ubuntu and on the Dell 570 running under Windows 7 (using the Audacity beta for that OS) and got the same results. Humm... I wonder what's going on? I looked through the FAQs and didn't see anything that relates to this. I'm new to Audacity so I may not have it set up right...
Thanks...
By the way, as you can tell from the .wav file, this mic has very good fidelity. It is specked at 35Hz to 18kHz. In the low end that's about six keys from the bottom of a piano keyboard, but the recording indicates that it works well all the way down. The upper key is around 4kHz so that's easily covered -- with room to spare for higher pitched instruments.