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#1
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![]() Does anyone have a preference or know of a sonic differnce between bouncing a stereo track to disk vs a dual mono track? I usually mix back into ProTools and then take thos files to mastering, but I bounce to disk for CD-Rs. I did a single test and bouncing two mono tracks sounded significanly better to me. In fact, I'm wondering if I somehow made a mistake when I was bouncing and didn't do the comparison right. Is there a reason that there would be any difference? |
#2
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That' not quite what I meant. Is there a reason that the stereo
interleaved file resulting from a dual mono bounce would sound different from the stereo interleaved file made from a bounced stereo track? |
#4
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#5
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In article .com,
Mike Caffrey wrote: That' not quite what I meant. Is there a reason that the stereo interleaved file resulting from a dual mono bounce would sound different from the stereo interleaved file made from a bounced stereo track? Not if the software is implemented properly. Sadly this is not always the case. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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Yes. The mixes are happening in the analog domain, so I've got to go
back in to make digital files. No master fader. I usually bounce to disk becuase I like to add just a little peak limiting. I gues I could audio suite the files and then export, but I'm still curious if I'm better off working with a stereo track or two mono tracks which I've always though was basically the smae thing in ProTools. |
#7
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Well I'm not sure if my first test was accurate and I spaced on a
little detail last night, so I didn't end up with two files to compare. I'm certain there's no differnece in volume, or if there is, it's a differnce created by the difference in bouncing. All I did was take the two mono track, bounce them and then drag them to a stereo track and bounce them. The difference seemed to be in the center information. I'm not saying that one had a wider image, but one clearly sounded better. The was in the context of bouncing a lot of files, so there's chance that I labled something wrong, but I figured that lots of people had probably tried this before and maybe there was a standard answer. |
#8
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That' not quite what I meant. Is there a reason that the stereo
interleaved file resulting from a dual mono bounce would sound different from the stereo interleaved file made from a bounced stereo track? In Protools the files used in a mix are all mono, even if they're arranged as a stereo track in the editor. The difference between a dual mono file and a stereo file is the in one case, the samples are arranged in two files, and in the other the samples are in one file alternating left and right, hence the term "interleaved". If there were any problems with the conversion of one format to the other, it would be a hell of a lot more apparent than a moderate lack of center information. It has absolutely nothing to do with what it was produced from, if a program can't accomplish that simple task with absolute accuracy then it sure can't be trusted with anything else. |
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