
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2014 9:12 am
Hi.
We recorded our audio using 32-bit float.
It has the obvious advantage that it won't clip audio at loud volumes.
And DaVinci Resolve supports 32-bit float.
We synced the audio to the BRAW camera files within Davinci Resolve and edited.
Now we need to send audio to post-production, and we cannot find a way.
Normally there would be two options:
1. Send an Audio EDL that can be conformed by audio post-production
2. Export an AAF (or previously OMF) that could be loaded by the audio post-production department.
But neither of these options seem to work.
For option 1,
I cannot find a way to export an accurate audio EDL. Once you've synced your audio to your BRAW, it's considered part of your video file, and you can't unlink it back to the audio original.
For option 2,
The ProTools AAF export in the delivery window does not support 32-bit float export. If you export 32-bit integer, you're going to start clipping the audio.
(I tried reducing the volume levels in Fairlight before exporting the AAF, but it seems the export ignores audio levels)
It seems hard to believe that there's no way to do this.
32-bit float is becoming increasingly popular for obvious reasons.
And with no way to export - and no way to produce a reliable audio EDL, it is a serious problem.
Is there a workaround, or am I missing something?
Thanks
We recorded our audio using 32-bit float.
It has the obvious advantage that it won't clip audio at loud volumes.
And DaVinci Resolve supports 32-bit float.
We synced the audio to the BRAW camera files within Davinci Resolve and edited.
Now we need to send audio to post-production, and we cannot find a way.
Normally there would be two options:
1. Send an Audio EDL that can be conformed by audio post-production
2. Export an AAF (or previously OMF) that could be loaded by the audio post-production department.
But neither of these options seem to work.
For option 1,
I cannot find a way to export an accurate audio EDL. Once you've synced your audio to your BRAW, it's considered part of your video file, and you can't unlink it back to the audio original.
For option 2,
The ProTools AAF export in the delivery window does not support 32-bit float export. If you export 32-bit integer, you're going to start clipping the audio.
(I tried reducing the volume levels in Fairlight before exporting the AAF, but it seems the export ignores audio levels)
It seems hard to believe that there's no way to do this.
32-bit float is becoming increasingly popular for obvious reasons.
And with no way to export - and no way to produce a reliable audio EDL, it is a serious problem.
Is there a workaround, or am I missing something?
Thanks