"BrianEWilliams"
<sorry_no_email@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:92383dd3.0309221527.48687338@posting.google.com...
>
"David Ruether" <rpn1@no-junk.cornell.edu> wrote in message
news:<bkngrt$2k3$1@news01.cit.cornell.edu>...
>
> > > > Or just export the audio, reimport it and place it on the
timeline,
>
> > > > then flip its channels...
>
> > > Much quicker. Also
preserves the edit structure. Thanks.
>
> > Although, now that I have tried it, I get an echoey sound to the
>
> > audio. Not sure if it is my
footage or the technique.
>
> "Sounds" like you are out of synch a frame or two (or more...).
>
That's what I thought too, but when I checked, any sync problem wasn't
>
obvious. When I don't have deadline
pressure, I'll try to figure this
>
one out.
Go to
the single frame level on the timeline and see if the sound is
visually
in synch between the two tracks at distinctive "events",
especially
toward the end (at least in P-5/6, scales other than
1-frame
can have the sound visual image not precisely in synch
with
the actual sound, unfortunately).
--
David Ruether
d_ruether@hotmail.com
http://www.David-Ruether-Photography.com