A friend of mine shoots an XL-1, and I have captured DV from his tapes and 
had two channels of audio present (left and right mics) in the single track 
of audio that appears in Premiere (6.5 in this case). Those tapes did 
include a third track, which I couldn't capture with Premiere, but could 
with Canopus Video. He also uses Premiere and finally downloaded Scenalyser 
Live to capture the extra track as a wav, while simultaneously capturing 
the rest.

David Hurdon

At 07:53 AM 9/20/2005 -0700, you wrote:

Johnny-- I believe you may be confusing channels of the DV stream with
stereo left/right channels.

Unfortunately, Premiere only captures 1 channel of DV audio. (And that
single channel can be stereo.) What the original poster is talking about is
using both channel inputs of the XL1, which the DV spec allows for,
recording to two separate channels simultaneously. Many of us don't ever use
it, because it only works in 32Khz 12 bit mode, as where the DV spec only
allows for 1 channel at 48Khz 16bit.

Keith, I know that some $capture cards$ allow you to capture that second
channel (such as Canopus), but if you are using straight onboard DV, then I
suggest you: capture with a software that captures 2 channels (alas, I have
no recommendations), 2. record analog inputs from your camera to your
computer. The 2nd option is less desirable, but may be the only way you can
get the 2nd channel out of your camera.

-jeff



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