Author Topic: AUDIOcigaretteS: get in here I need help  (Read 1281 times)


Yeah, lower the volume like sacred said. In the video production class I took, my teacher said that if it gets too loud it'll overload and make weird noises.

Its the result of a non industry-standard mic and external noise. Book a recording studio.

For less-expensive things try a noise removal plug-in for audacity and lower volume a bit.

Its the result of a non industry-standard mic and external noise. Book a recording studio.

For less-expensive things try a noise removal plug-in for audacity and lower volume a bit.

lowered volume less burr but still burr

That loud hum is more than likely your microphone if you're recording through your mic. If you're recording through say a game-audio capture program, just lower the volume at which it records.


If all else fails, attempt a different program which doesn't compress the audio file as it records.

Tom

Find EQ
Turn each slider down until you find the one(s) that make the noise quieter.

Use a pre-amp. If the burr isn't audible when you're talking then just use a noise gate.

There is a thing in the effects menu look for it, one second I need to download audacity on my laptop then I will post again

Noise removal
Try that.

It would be better if you can find out what is causing the problem though, try another port on your computer and see if that helps.
Reaper > Audacity.
That looks pretty lovey, I will have to try that.
« Last Edit: August 07, 2011, 10:11:49 PM by zookuw »

Use a pre-amp. If the burr isn't audible when you're talking then just use a noise gate.

I doubt whatever he's recording is worth throwing the money towards a pre-amp. A good one is like a minimum of 200

I doubt whatever he's recording is worth throwing the money towards a pre-amp. A good one is like a minimum of 200

Mine was like $50.

Hmmm... can you send me a sample of what you're recording? I might have an idea to fix this that involves FL Studio.

It probably won't, but if your laptop has a ground icon next to one of the case screws (like this: ), attach a wire there and run it either to a case screw of a grounded piece of equipment or into the ground pin of the nearest outlet.  You could try recording and touching a grounded wire to different screws until the hum goes away, and attach it there.

Used that, still a BURRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR in the background.
Did you highlight some of the "BURRR" without anything else and register it as the sound you want to remove?

Open sound file in Audacity
Select section of audio that is only the feedback
Go to effect > Noise Removal
Click "Get Noise Profile"
Select everything
Go to the Noise Removal effect again
Press "OK" this time

Durr