I recorded some audio at 32Kbps. I made a pitch change, and then exported the file. It saved it at 128Kbps, creating a file far too large.
Is there a way I can select the sample rate for saving?
Save - sample rate
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Please state which version of Windows you are using,
and the exact three-section version number of Audacity from "Help menu > About Audacity".
Audacity 1.2.x and 1.3.x are obsolete and no longer supported. If you still have those versions, please upgrade at https://www.audacityteam.org/download/.
The old forums for those versions are now closed, but you can still read the archives of the 1.2.x and 1.3.x forums.
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the-inventor
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kozikowski
- Forum Staff
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Re: Save - sample rate
Yes, but.
We assume you're editing an MP3 or similar sound file. When you export a new file, select options to the right of the file type window and use those settings to create your new file.
But you might not want to do that. Audacity doesn't edit MP3 files. It imports them inside itself and then creates a whole new MP3 when you're finished. This doubles the compression bubbly, honky sound damage and you can't stop it.
32 is the quality setting for a barely workable mono sound file. When you get done, it may not be workable any more. It may sound seriously gargley and damaged.
This is the very serous shortcoming of trying to do production and effects in MP3. Highly not recommended. You can patch or correct the very high quality, large WAV file that you originally used to make the first MP3. That works.
You can't easily go from MP3 to MP3.
Koz
We assume you're editing an MP3 or similar sound file. When you export a new file, select options to the right of the file type window and use those settings to create your new file.
But you might not want to do that. Audacity doesn't edit MP3 files. It imports them inside itself and then creates a whole new MP3 when you're finished. This doubles the compression bubbly, honky sound damage and you can't stop it.
32 is the quality setting for a barely workable mono sound file. When you get done, it may not be workable any more. It may sound seriously gargley and damaged.
This is the very serous shortcoming of trying to do production and effects in MP3. Highly not recommended. You can patch or correct the very high quality, large WAV file that you originally used to make the first MP3. That works.
You can't easily go from MP3 to MP3.
Koz
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Gale Andrews
- Quality Assurance
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- Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2007 12:02 am
- Operating System: Windows 10
Re: Save - sample rate
The bit rate (kbps) is where Koz told you - click the "Options..." button.the-inventor wrote:I recorded some audio at 32Kbps. I made a pitch change, and then exported the file. It saved it at 128Kbps, creating a file far too large.
Is there a way I can select the sample rate for saving?
The sample rate (Hz) is bottom left (Project Rate). For a 32 kbps MP3 file, only 48000, 44100 and 32000 Hz are valid. 44100 Hz is the most compatible.
Gale
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