![]() ![]() If you must use lossy compression MP3 will add a few milliseconds of silence to the beginning of the file so you may have to slightly re-adjust the timing after loading the audio into your video editor. I have a program called Womble MPEG Video Wizard that has a “fix timestamps” feature (which sometimes works), but I think it’s no longer available, it’s not free, and it might only work with MPEG-2.īTW - It’s best if you can export to WAV (or another lossless format) to minimize the number of times the audio is lossy-compressed. But, that’s a lossy process even at a higher bitrate. Sometimes, I’ve solved it by transcoding the original audio/video file to a different (usually slightly higher) bitrate or to a completely different format. It seems to happen more often with MPEG-4 or MOV files than with MPEG-2, and DV-AVI seems to be pretty-much immune. ![]() The more compressed files seem to be more prone to this. ![]() I think the problem is “timing glitches” in the original MP4. ![]()
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