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...how much music exists out there has been sufficiently well written, performed, recorded and replicated to justify or be worthy of a $five-figure piece of supportive audio gear. (Supportive in that it's not the source, amplification or transducer.) This presumes it's the music and not the audio jewelry aspect that's important.


In addition, I continue to wonder how these ADC units compare pro audio USB interfaces and master recorders such as the Alesis Masterlink (no longer in production); Tascam DA3000 $1000 (current) or even the very handy portables by Sony PCM D100 $800, Zoom and Tascam. Such units conveniently fall in the $350-$1900 price gap.


Please refer to my post titled "setting level". From the outs of the phono pre, the level of the input into the ADC needs be adjusted so as to be the maximum signal without overload (as you know). This can be done with a conventional analogue preamp or it can be done with software (e.g. VinylStudio). My hunch is that some of the performance difference among these ADC's were obscured by use of software to set input level. Garbage in, garbage out. The Ayre and the Lynx have analogue level setting (with you noting the Lynx, above, when I thought omly the Ayre featured such). Did you use the available the analogue level input when converting signal with the Ayre and Lynx respectively? Or did you use Vinyl Studio to adjust input level? A third option, as I note above, is to simply insert a conventional preamp in between the phono output and ADC input to adjust level with ALL of the units.


I have an audio track that I made with the microphone on my laptop (as I do not have a better one). When playing the audio outside Movie Edit Pro, or when previewing the video inside Movie Edit Pro the sound is fine. No cracking whatsoever.


Now when exporting to Mpeg 4 I get a weird cracking sound that happens in unregular intervals, about every 10 seconds. It is really annoying and makes the video unusable. I also get the effect in different formats such as WMV, MPG. When exporting to AVI, the sound is fine (although the size of the video went from 13MB to 1.2GB). I have tried a different sample rate (44.100 or 48.000) and a different bitrate (128 and 160) and that does not make a difference.


Win 10 Pro 64 bit, Intel i7 Quad Core 6700K @ 4GHz, 32 GB RAM, NVidia GTX 1660TI and Intel HD530 Graphics, MOTU 8-Pre f/w audio interface, VPX, MEP, Music Maker, PhotoStory Deluxe, Photo Manager Deluxe, Xara 3D Maker 7, Reaper, Adobe Audition 3, CS6 and CC, 2 x Canon HG10 cameras, 1 x Canon EOS 600D


The cracking sound is part of the video, as it can be heard on other computers as well (as you will notice when opening the attached video). It is not part of the .wav audio track though, which I created with Movie Edit Pro as well.


I exported the video again with 192 bitrate audio, and the problem occurs much less, not all all in the first 30 secs, but then a lot again afterwards. Is there a way to set it even higher, or should I have selected a higher bit rate when recording the audio?


No, there was no mobile phone close by when recording the sound, just my laptop. As mentioned, there is no unwanted noise in the .wav audio track. And the video does not have sound, recorded in OBS with sound disabled.


However, given you are clearly using the internal audio of your computer this is baffling, to say the least. Can you check with the manufacturer of the internal audio (most often realtek, I think) that the drivers are up-to-date?


I apologize I missed one part to that and it fixed it at least for future problems! Thanks! For me it was the audio bit rate was to low I had mine on 160, and I moved it up to 320 and it worked perfectly


Sorry for necroing this thread but I have exactly---and I mean exactly---the same type of crackling sound.Yes, I've read the entire thread. No, there was no outside interference. The problem is with Nvidia Shadowplay. If I record with OBS, the sound is perfectly fine. However, in Shadowplay I've set the bitrate to 50Mbps (the default) while in OBS, I've set it to 25Mbps. (So the fact that OBS works perfectly well in the audio department with Magix points that it's not my environs or my electronics that's the problem.)The problem now is that lately, every time I open up OBS, it causes screen tearing (and yes, I've Vsync and Triple Buffering on; in-game and on the control panel and simultaneously---I've tried every combination) so now I'm left with just Shadowplay, which doesn't cause the odd tearing. Video now works fine. It's just the audio that's bothering me. Magix Movie Edit Pro 2015 Plus and Shadowplay do not seem to like each other.I'll lower the bitrate later and report here if whether the bug disappears.My specs:


I'm trying out exporting the audio file in Magix as an MP3 file and see if it does not come up with a messed up result.UPDATE: No luck. :( Cranked it up to 320. I still got the crackling sounds. I wonder if fiddling with these settings will fix it?


In MEP, go to File / Settings / Program, find Playback and first try switching audio drivers. You should have the choice of either Wave Driver or Direct Sound. If changing the driver doesn't cure the problem then try increasing the number of Audio buffers.


- I'm using Razer Synapse with the Razer Seiren microphone and Razer Surround installed- The glitch is not present in the recorded video; only when you load it to Magix.- The glitch occurs even before exporting. Instances of it show up on the wave form as vertical narrow bars.- Using OBS with Magix Movie Edit Pro does NOT replicate this glitch. Only with Shadowplay (and I can't use OBS with this particular game as it bugs out).- I've solved this problem by using Handbrake to render the video as two files: one containing my voice and the other the ingame audio. I'm using the DTS-HD passthru feature when doing this. I then separate the audio files using Magix. I encounter no problem using this approach but it's such a roundabout solution that a fix would be appreciated.So, points of interest:- Magix does NOT have any problems with OBS, only recordings by Nvidia Shadowplay 2ff7e9595c


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