If I stop and restart it, it's fine again, which leads me to suspect a buffer issue. Playback starts fine, but after a few seconds starts stuttering. Here's that YouTube video I found, for reference.Playing back a project that played fine in 16.2.7.Ībout 42 stereo tracks of 48kHz 24bit audio, some submix busses, a few plugins and effects, nothing major. TheBloke wrote:You said "no matter my audio level low or high" - but did you try actually boosting the level in the file itself, ie saving a new copy of the file with boosted audio levels? As opposed to just adjusting the mixer slider in Resolve itself. It's what all the kids are listening to these days! Here's that YouTube video I found, for reference. But it's what I'd try, in the absence of better information. Just to emphasise again, I have no experience of this and have absolutely no idea if any of that can help and it's quite possible it could make the signal even less usable - especially the noise reduction part, as it could easily detect parts of the encoded data as 'noise'. ![]() Then bake all that back to a new file, cross your fingers, and try Resolve again. Likewise if there are variances in the volume level - I'm guessing that in a correct signal, volume should be fairly flat - then you could try smoothing that out. So if your audio tracks has anything that seems quite different to that, like sudden clicks, pops, etc, then maybe you could try some very gentle and targetted noise reduction/anti-click filters to remove that. It's quite a regular and consistent sound. It sounds a bit like loading from a Commodore 64 / Spectrum data cassette tape (if you're old enough to know what that is!). I don't know exactly what the encoding sounds like, but I found a YouTube video called "5 minutes of EBU LTC" which I guess is similar, even if not the same format. Maybe Resolve's TC detection ignores slider levels and just reads the raw audio, so it would require actually baking in higher audio levels to the file for Resolve to see a hotter signal.įailing that, if you listen to the audio can you notice anything that seems out of place? Like pops or crackles, noise that doesn't sound like the encoding. But that's what I'd try - boost the volume level in the audio track and save it back to a new file, and try that new file. ![]() You said "no matter my audio level low or high" - but did you try actually boosting the level in the file itself, ie saving a new copy of the file with boosted audio levels? As opposed to just adjusting the mixer slider in Resolve itself. Would also like to hear your experiences is there anything I can do in resolve to help? Honestly would LOOOOVE to see this feature Audio to LTC updated with more adaptability and be able to read audio even better. However, TENTACLE TIMECODE TOOL does see the timecode in the audio instantly leading me to assume Davinci Resolves Audio to Timecode is quite simple and is not quite as adaptive way to seek out the timecode in audio? I also hear the GH5 and timecode has issues to the audio prerecord on the camera? I've tried sending timecode audio via wireless audio packs (Sony UWP-D11 as I don't have a TC box) and while yes it's absolutely not as good/reliable as a proper timecode box etc but it should still work but the problem is no matter my audio level low or high Davinci will not see and update the timecode from the audio as I guess it's not clean enough? The problem is that resolve will ONLY see my timecode through audio if I plug a cable directly into the camera from my recorder or use a proper timebox box (Tentacle) etc etc I've been using timecode recently and I'll never ever go back to syncing by waveforms automatically or manually, I've been sending LTC through my cameras audio directly from my recorder and Resolve works amazing with it and makes my workflow an absolute dream especially with Polywavs files and the way Resolve combines them all into the clips with all tracks separated, I love it so much!
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