Sat May 03, 2025 12:09 pm
grant.cahoon wrote:Thanks for that information. I was wondering if, instead of soloing two tracks, I muted all but two tracks, would that make any difference in the amount of stuff that was being processed and thus not cause drop out on the audio tracks. Just a guess though. Would anyone care to comment on that approach to solving the problem.
Did you try it?
One thing to note - by default (on the Edit and probably Cut pages) Resolve gives priority to audio playback at the expense of skipping video frames, however, there is an option to play all video frames which will then cause the audio to hiccup assuming Resolve struggles with your source media or applied effects. Any idea if you have selected 'Play all video frames' in the 3-dot menu of the timeline viewer window?
I should add that presumably the Fairlight page would prioritize audio over video but I don't know if this is true so my suggestion above may not apply to your case.
aka Barkinmadd
Resolve Studio 20 | Fusion Studio 20 | 16" MacBook Pro M1 MAX, 32 GPU cores, 64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD, Sequoia 15.4.1