Outofsync wrote:I have played with this by adding silence because using delay features seems to be referring to something other than what I want; that or I am applying the effect wrong. Silence works well enough though, its barely noticeable….J haha
'Delay' in the sense I was using it is an option in most muxing programs which lets you set the point where the audio starts playing as sooner or later than the default. In effect adding silence to the actual file accomplishes the same thing.
What I now understand is that:
1. The best audio approach is never to use audio in the finished Windows Movie Maker compression if possible. But to use DV-AVI to export the video only.
2. If audio must be used in WMM use WAV not MP3
3. Best audio solution is to attach the audio in VDUB using either the straight MP3 or a WAV file attached through the streams option, which can then be finalized by compressing to whichever format is appropriate for distribution.
1. Correct.
2. It's not just WMM; it's never a good idea to use MP3 (or other lossy audio compression formats in general) in a non-linear editor. It applies to stuff like Premiere, also.
3. Correct. Although this depends on what the original file is in the first place. If, for instance, it's an AAC or Vorbis file, then VDubMod* isn't a good option because those formats don't play nice with AVI (both of them) or VDubMod (AAC). Use a container that properly supports the audio stream. Chances are the popular containers will also support whatever video compression you're using also.
*Since VDubMod is the one with support for a few more types of audio. VDub itself only allows WAV or MP3, maybe WMA - but with MP3 (and WMA, if that is actually possible - it'd be under the DivX ;) Audio title in that case, however), they have to have been wrapped in a WAV file, which is messy. VDubMod does it properly, although I still don't think it supports WMA unless it's wrapped in WAV - but MP3, FLAC, and Vorbis are handled correctly.
I have heard people say to attach the audio in VDUB as a WAV and not bother with an MP3, or as Qyot27 (btw love your avatar) suggested the MP3. So which is better; the MP3 added as a stream in VDUB or a wav added in VDUB? I just want the best possible video for you guys, since you’re the best. Thanks again.
See my answer to #3 above. You want to use the original file if possible, because then there is the least chance or amount of quality loss. If the audio came straight off the CD as a WAV file or it's originally in some lossless format like FLAC, TTA, or APE, then compress it to MP3 (or other format of choice, again see what I say about other formats in #3) and slap it on there or compress it through VDubMod to MP3. I tend to encode video by itself, and then add the audio after the video is compressed.