Hi
new to this forum and audacity. really love the program and getting a handle on it. most likely a stupid question....the wah wah when i use it to process sounds it clips very badly when it gets to the higher frequencies in the sweep. i tried to do the clip fix but it didn't really make any difference. i tried the other settings in the wah perameters and that didnt seem to change it
do i need to reduce the db's of my sample prior to using the wah wah? i like the very wide sweeps where the effect is most prominet
any help would be appreciated
thanks
wah wah clipping
Forum rules
This board is ONLY for general feedback and discussion about Audacity 2.X.
If you require help, or think you have found a "bug", please post on the forum board relevant to your operating system.
Windows
Mac OS X
GNU/Linux and Unix-like
This board is ONLY for general feedback and discussion about Audacity 2.X.
If you require help, or think you have found a "bug", please post on the forum board relevant to your operating system.
Windows
Mac OS X
GNU/Linux and Unix-like
-
altonentre
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2013 6:46 pm
- Operating System: Please select
-
kozikowski
- Forum Staff
- Posts: 68902
- Joined: Thu Aug 02, 2007 5:57 pm
- Operating System: macOS 10.13 High Sierra
Re: wah wah clipping
If you got clipping on the timeline, then you should be able to just Effect > Amplify and bring the show back down out of clipping. Audacity uses 32-bit floating format which allows that. It would not work outside of Audacity.
Reduce the volume of the whole show so it doesn't clip and then turn the volume up on your headphones or speakers. If the volume range between the quiet and loud parts of the show is too great, then you can use one of several tools like Envelope or Compressor to reduce the range. Once you get a working show and export it, clipping damage is permanent.
Koz
Reduce the volume of the whole show so it doesn't clip and then turn the volume up on your headphones or speakers. If the volume range between the quiet and loud parts of the show is too great, then you can use one of several tools like Envelope or Compressor to reduce the range. Once you get a working show and export it, clipping damage is permanent.
Koz
Re: wah wah clipping
Yes.altonentre wrote: do i need to reduce the db's of my sample prior to using the wah wah?
Unfortunately that is not quite the case with the WahWah effect. This effect is a bit different to most other Audacity effects in that it clips at 0 dB, even if the audio track is 32 bit float. The old "Bass Boost" effect had the same problem, which was one of the reasons that it was replaced with the new "Bass and Treble" effect (which does not have this limitation).kozikowski wrote:If you got clipping on the timeline, then you should be able to just Effect > Amplify and bring the show back down out of clipping. Audacity uses 32-bit floating format which allows that.
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)