chrisneal
4th March 2005, 19:17
Hello all,
I have converted a super8 analog videotape to DVD via a standalone DVD recorder, then used DVDDecryptor to extract the DVD to a VOB file, then converted this VOB to an AVI to edit in Premiere. The AVI is of a local band playing, so the audio track on the AVI is *horrible* from the PA being way too loud for the S8's tiny microphone.
I have an separate audio source that was made from the mixing board of the same show, which I've converted to .WAV files. I am able to sync the video from the AVI with the independent WAV file and the result is really cool.
The problem is that *both* original sources were on tapes, which apparently have stretched with time. The result is that the perfectly sync'd audio and video tracks slowly get out of sync as the songs progress.
Does anyone know of a way in Premiere to re-sync the two tracks? I tried slowing the audio track down by a very small percentage, but that didn't work well at all.
The only other thing I can think of is to perhaps add some frames to the video track that will in effect, "slow it down" slightly and might get them back on track.
Any suggestions?
Thank you for your time.
Chris
I have converted a super8 analog videotape to DVD via a standalone DVD recorder, then used DVDDecryptor to extract the DVD to a VOB file, then converted this VOB to an AVI to edit in Premiere. The AVI is of a local band playing, so the audio track on the AVI is *horrible* from the PA being way too loud for the S8's tiny microphone.
I have an separate audio source that was made from the mixing board of the same show, which I've converted to .WAV files. I am able to sync the video from the AVI with the independent WAV file and the result is really cool.
The problem is that *both* original sources were on tapes, which apparently have stretched with time. The result is that the perfectly sync'd audio and video tracks slowly get out of sync as the songs progress.
Does anyone know of a way in Premiere to re-sync the two tracks? I tried slowing the audio track down by a very small percentage, but that didn't work well at all.
The only other thing I can think of is to perhaps add some frames to the video track that will in effect, "slow it down" slightly and might get them back on track.
Any suggestions?
Thank you for your time.
Chris