![audition cs6 wav track separator audition cs6 wav track separator](https://softwarg.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Download-Adobe-Audition-CS6.jpg)
Additionally, I don't hear the thump when I play the footage from another computer. This is the exact same file I uploaded to vimeo.
![audition cs6 wav track separator audition cs6 wav track separator](https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-vIactOu_iGM/WjVAbFzZNdI/AAAAAAAABWc/wQuacsQIdl4RM38q0jhKwOJUlT0RzyaKwCEwYBhgL/s640/Adobe%2BAudition%2BCS6%2B%2B%25283%2529.png)
Partway through, I start hearing the thump again, as if it had been "recorded" as part of the finished product. Today, after having moved the wall wart for the speakers to another outlet and circuit, and not getting the thump since doing so, I re-opened that project to write the finished product to an SDHC card for the customer, and played the final cut from the sequence in the PPro timeline just to refresh my memory of it. Well, I did some rather simple noise removal in Audition CS6, saved that audio file, finished editing, saved my project in PPro CC, exported the sequence via AME to one of the vimeo presets, and posted the results to vimeo for the customer to approve. I thought it was my speakers "going bad". During editing, and what prompted me to pose my dilemma here, I was getting the "thump", it seemed during editing whenever the audio would peak/red-line, i.e.
![audition cs6 wav track separator audition cs6 wav track separator](https://plugintorrent.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/54839acf7cc3a73817baf94d07c1cc71.png)
I've recently recorded and edited some footage for a customer. I'm not trying to play "stump the experts" here, but today I noticed something totally unexpected. However, I did notice yet another anomaly that has me totally perplexed. (I've been unusually busy of late, but I promise to record a brief audio segment so you can hear it, it just may not be until the weekend).Īs for # 2 in your reply, I do have a meter, but, again, I probably won't get to that until the weekend. THANKS SO MUCH for your patience and perseverance.Īs for the noise, Item # 1 in Greg's response, it's definitely a "thump", and not a "pop" or "click". But on the downside, all those filaments were a very low resistance when cold, so turning on the filament supply caused a pretty significant - though brief - downward spike in the mains voltage.īut about your "dead PCs" scenario: don't you folks have slow-blow fuses? A lot of equipment has same in the mains circuit, although "fast blow" in the downstream DC buses. They conducted not at all when cold, so the current just gradually ramped up as the filaments (or cathodes) got warmer. That, in conjunction with anti-corrosive paste (NoAlOx, DeOx, Penetrox, etc.), makes the problem much less serious than it was when Aluminum wiring first went into widespread use.īTW, vacuum tube (valve to you) rectifiers were the best, in terms of inrush current.
![audition cs6 wav track separator audition cs6 wav track separator](https://crackview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/adobe-audition-crack-1024x545.png)
Older terminals (on switches, outlets, breakers, etc.) were made from brass, which corroded rapidly in contact with Aluminum newer terminals are made from an alloy that is much less prone to corrosion. Yes, the metal creep can happen with any conductor, it's just more pronounced with Aluminum. the relative impedance at our 60Hz mains frequency). the current was limited only by the value of the capacitor (i.e. I got "surprised"on more than one such set (the surprise ranging from a tingle to a strong zap). So even in the best of times, the chassis was floating at 1/2 of the mains voltage. (And back then, it was not uncommon to have a pair of disc capacitors for "noise suppression," one tied to "hot" side of AC, one tied to "neutral" side of AC, and the remaining lead of each cap tied to the metal chassis, making a capacitive voltage divider. (Nothing here was polarized then, so, depending on chance, either side of the plug might have been connected to the neutral side of the mains.) Of course if the fuse in the neutral side had blown, the entire radio would have been "hot" with respect to ground. I haven't seen a fused power plug since the 1950s when my grandfather had an old floor-model AM/MW/SW radio with cartridge fuses in both sides of the line plug. Maybe the OP's TV/monitor has such a supply (quite likely unless it's ancient) in which case that might explain the entire scenario. I hadn't thought of that but it makes good sense. I like your idea of using a switched-mode power supply to test for high impedance mains wiring. Very interesting, Chris, including the trivia!