Sunday, February 16, 2014

Why does the audio keep breaking when I record a video on my camera?




Fateha


I have just bought a Casio Exilim EX-H5. When I take a video on the camera, the sound keeps disappearing every couple of seconds.

I thought that this was probably happening because I was filming an HD movie on a normal SD memory card, however, this also happens when I record a standard movie.

Do you know why this is happening? Or is it neccessary for me to use an SDHC memory card even for recording movies which are not high definition?



Answer
Hi Fateha:

Unfortunately, most still cameras shooting video are a compromise to start with. Examining the Casio official page for the EX-H5, it even lists "SDHC" as the spec for this model, so the bigger & faster the card, the better. Also, regular SD cards are typically formatted in FAT-16, whereas SDHC cards typically use FAT-32 due to the larger memory size. Make sure you have used that CAMERA and not a PC or another device to format the card with. (Try saving all your old pictures/videos onto a computer, then erase & re-format in your Casio.)

Test your camera with the video set to "LP: 320 x 240". This only records at 15 frames-per-second. The HD (720p @ 24fps) and "Standard" (480i @ 30fps) both require a higher # of pictures-per-second, not just higher resolution. If your sound records normally at the LP setting, then you know it's your SD Card.

Also, it's not only just SDHC (High Capacity) that is the issue, it is also speed rating of the card (a/k/a Class #). Some cheap SD Class 4 and Class 6 cards can't even handle video well. If you can afford Class 10, try that with your HD setting. If you still have problems, return your camera.

See the excellent section on SD card Class/Speed ratings at Wikipedia's SD Card article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SD_card#Speed_Class_Rating

Stick with the major SDHC brands such as SanDisk, Panasonic, Lexar, and Toshiba (all of which Nikon tests & approves for their high-end cameras). Beware of cheap internet "counterfeit" SD Cards that are intentionally mis-labeled as high-speed, but are not.

hope this helps,
--Dennis C.
 

Video Audio recorded changed! help!?




GingerzBee


I recorded something with my digital camera and it sounds horrible! (too loud and too fuzzyyyyyyyy) is there any programs out there that'll fix it( please don't say windows movie maker) that think only lowers the volume but it still sounds all distorted!!! =( I want to change the volume and other things so it won't sound so horrible!any software out there! ? :(


Answer
hey! i guess your problem seems familiar to me. try using Nero 7 or 8 go to nero soundtrax or nero wave editor. just try to convert it's sample frequency and reduce it's volume on the volume tab>volume change. it should help if you are recording audio only. if it includes video try using adobe premier(i haven't tried it yet but i know it works it audio visual editor). good luck!




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