My SMPTE stripe is actually starting at 08:00:00.00 however there is something weird in Twisted Wave that it displays the WAV file early by one frame, so I correct it here to make up for it. Change this time to match the time of where the timecode stripe on your audio file is starting at (if you’re not sure, ask the person who generated the audio file or run it through an actual SMPTE clock to find out – reference my earlier post on reading SMPTE on a mac to be able to do this). Make sure that Preserve Start TC is checked and then click on Edit. Drag the WAV file that you wish to alter into the large area at the top, or from the File menu, click on Import.Īt the Recording Info area in the center bottom of the display, click on Frame Rate and select the rate that your timecode audio file is running at. Go here and download Wave Agent ( Once installed, open Wave Agent. However, it becomes very handy when you are programming offline and need to get markers in, in a program like Twisted Wave for example. I have found that when these files come from the audio team, they don’t necessarily have the correct start time entered (since no-one really needs to use it). There is a great reference available in Broadcast WAV files that allows many audio editing programs to display an embedded timecode stamp that was given to it from the audio program that created the file.
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