Quality deteriorates on second track
Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2012 1:15 pm
Hi all,
I'm running Audacity 1.2.6 and I've been having a problem I just can't find any help on.
When I'm recording voice with my microphone (the only sort of recording I do) the first track always sounds great. Quality recording from my microphone (mic jack, not USB) almost every time.
Then, as soon as I move onto a second track, for whatever reason, the recording becomes incredibly tinny and will occasionally drop - almost as if it is coming from a different microphone.
Things I've tried:
- Changing microphone, three different ones, nothing helped.
- Installing the trial of Adobe Audition CS 5.5 - here it was even worse, even the first track quality sounds terrible, much like the second tracks in Audacity.
- Checking to see if my computer mic is picking up the recording on the second tracks - it's not.
I've been getting by, by recording everything in a new window of Audacity and merging it all together in the end - as you might imagine this is a real time waster.
If anyone has any ideas they would be warmly welcomed - or is there anyone in the same boat?
Cheers,
Simon
I'm running Audacity 1.2.6 and I've been having a problem I just can't find any help on.
When I'm recording voice with my microphone (the only sort of recording I do) the first track always sounds great. Quality recording from my microphone (mic jack, not USB) almost every time.
Then, as soon as I move onto a second track, for whatever reason, the recording becomes incredibly tinny and will occasionally drop - almost as if it is coming from a different microphone.
Things I've tried:
- Changing microphone, three different ones, nothing helped.
- Installing the trial of Adobe Audition CS 5.5 - here it was even worse, even the first track quality sounds terrible, much like the second tracks in Audacity.
- Checking to see if my computer mic is picking up the recording on the second tracks - it's not.
I've been getting by, by recording everything in a new window of Audacity and merging it all together in the end - as you might imagine this is a real time waster.
If anyone has any ideas they would be warmly welcomed - or is there anyone in the same boat?
Cheers,
Simon