From: Jeff W. <we...@ya...> - 2006-03-03 03:34:00
|
2 things to consider: 1) If you tell GWC to only remove the strong clicks, it will leave any clicks that fall below it's threshold of "strong". These may still be audible. 2) GWC only displays red lines for the first 1000 clicks not repaired. So there may be > 1000 clicks it couldn't repair. There are 2 reasons for not repairing a click, first the repair algorithm can just plain fail (the rare case), and second if it determines the width of the click in samples is > 100. I suggest you extract a small section of audio, no more than 2 seconds which has clicks and get comfortable with what GWC is doing -- you can set the strong and weak click detection thresholds in the menus, so play around with that if too many clicks are getting thru. Hope that helps, and keep asking for help if you are stuck or not clear on what to do. Cheers, Jeff Bobby Goins wrote: >OK, I have the latest gwc up and running. > >I tried to 'remove strong clicks' as 'root' on a wave file taken from vinyl. >After some time (since I start this from the command line, I get to watch the >samples being processed), gwc tells me that it repaired so many clicks and >did not repair so many clicks, and there are red lines on the signal window. >This is all well and fine, but the clicks are still showing on the signal >window and are still audible when played back. Saving the file after being >repaired gives me what I started out with. > >What am I not doing? > >Bob > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This SF.Net email is sponsored by xPML, a groundbreaking scripting language >that extends applications into web and mobile media. Attend the live webcast >and join the prime developer group breaking into this new coding territory! >http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=110944&bid=241720&dat=121642 >_______________________________________________ >Gwc-general mailing list >Gwc...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gwc-general > > > >!DSPAM:4407b624181291166326961! > > |