Given that you already know a couple of passages in the file where you assume
the highest peak is, playing them and adjusting the AccessiblePeakMeter2 in the
peak mode until you find the position where the threshold is only touched once,
will give you the highest peak position as well, but it’s
As a workaround, you can use the Strip Silence dialog to set a threshold and
temporarily strip away everything except for whatever crosses above the
threshold and simply use the tab key to move to and play only the loudest
sections of the file and look at the peak meter. If, say, you know that
Sorry, I said Normalize but I meant the Gain plug-in, under the Audio Suite
menu.
> On Oct 26, 2018, at 12:06 PM, John Covici wrote:
>
> If its the plugin which comes with pt, I don't see an annalyze
> button. What am I missing here?
>
> On Fri, 26 Oct 2018 11:20:40 -0400,
> Slau Halatyn
If its the plugin which comes with pt, I don't see an annalyze
button. What am I missing here?
On Fri, 26 Oct 2018 11:20:40 -0400,
Slau Halatyn wrote:
>
> You can use the Normalize plug-in, press the Analyze button and read the
> result with VOCR.
> > On Oct 26, 2018, at 10:13 AM, John Covici
Thanks for your response.
But that still does not tell me where it is in the file which I would
really like to know.
On Fri, 26 Oct 2018 10:23:37 -0400,
John André Lium-Netland wrote:
>
> I see your point…. Not sure if there is such a tool available, but for
> shorter audio, I would reset the
You can use the Normalize plug-in, press the Analyze button and read the result
with VOCR.
> On Oct 26, 2018, at 10:13 AM, John Covici wrote:
>
> Now if only there were a way to find the maximum volume in a file,
> maybe n hour or two, that would be very nice. And I don't want to
> play the
Hi, I'm also testing this great tools in other DAW and their very handy
indeed. Thanks to the developers and John for sharing it with us. I'm still
getting use to this technique of course.
Allow me to point this out: I don’t have SoundForge install in my MacPro
but on a Windows system,
I see your point…. Not sure if there is such a tool available, but for shorter
audio, I would reset the peak meter for the master inside of PT and play the
whole file. If the meter is set correctly in the preferences, it will show the
highest level obtained when finished.
On 26 Oct 2018, at
Now if only there were a way to find the maximum volume in a file,
maybe n hour or two, that would be very nice. And I don't want to
play the whole thing to find out!
On Fri, 26 Oct 2018 10:06:39 -0400,
John André Lium-Netland wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I’ve got a couple of questions related to the
Hi,
I’ve got a couple of questions related to the use of the accessible peak meter
and spectrum analyser, and in case this is useful to someone else, I’ll paste
inn my answers below. I should also add that the manuals for these plugins are
found in the users/shared/documentation folder on your
Hi,
The new AccessiblePeakMeter2 is far better than the previous version, it’s
built on the code from Queen Mary University, but now with the support for RMS,
LUFS, VU and peak meter in one app.
The new AccessibleSpectrumAnalyser is now compatible with Pro Tools, so should
install as
I think this is the accessible peak metre I downloaded a year or so back. I
assume they’ve probably updated it. I think at that time I couldn’t get the
spectrum analyser to install or work or something like that. But i’m really
interested to try it again, as it could come in very handy. I can
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