Making multiple wav files
I have a voice recording that runs about an hour. It is of an old guy telling short stories about growing up in the 1920s. I have split each story off onto its own track and there are 34 such tracks. I have done this sort of thing before and know how to make 34 trips to the Mixdown logic to create the 34 wav files I need as output to create a CD of the man’s stories. This is time consuming, though. Is there a way to tell N-Track to just create a seperate file for each of the tracks in a song?
That sounds reall interesting to me. I once recorded my gran telling all her best recipes,
If I understand you, you should be able to go to where the tracks are stored, like in Program files, FASoft, n-track and inside that folder there may be the files with the project name as the root going title_1l, title_2l etc.? If you can find those then just tell your burner to burn those files without mixing. Does that make sense? It should just burn one at a time, as long as you put them in order for your burner cue list it should just record one at a time.
The way I would do that is to use
NERO 5 (or above) You can load in
the whole track to burn, but there is
an option to split the track using markers,
I think it’s right click on the file,
and select options or edit.
and you can give a unique name to each split
track.
I used to do that with albums,
record one side, split to individual songs,
name each song, then burn the CD.
It’s very good for this sort of thing.
There are numerous how-to’s about NERO
track splitting - do a google search,
it’s fast and easy.
I knew there was a thread around here about this…
http://ntrack.com/cgi-bin/ikonforum/index.cgi?act=ST;f=1;t=7464
D
Here is exactly what I mean
Nero Track Split
Willy is the best…
Thanks for that 7 o’ 11. I forgot all about that video. I haven’t seen Willy around over there in a long time… He is/was in Australia I believe…
D
TRY THIS FIRST - see how many output channels you have available on laptop/pc - “hammer” on output meters - popup - select in out channels - MOST onboard soundcards have more outputs available than there are output connrctors - so my Realtek onboard soundcard shows 4 stereo outputs available - only one stereo out socket -
IF you have such on your system then tick all outputs and asign each trach to a different output - then on MIXDOWN choose seperate track for each output -
if all audio on i track cut out sections drag to new tracks - mixdown -
Dr J