On Fri, 2009-07-24 at 21:16 -0500, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote: > Mike Adolf wrote: > > I am not sure this is the best list for this post. But, I thought I > > would start here. If no answers, maybe someone could direct me > > elsewhere. > > > > When I make a DVD backup with, say K9copy, and play it on my comercical > > DVD player hooked to a relitively cheap digital tv, the sound is not > > sufficient to overcome the noise of my exercise equipment - even wearing > > a headset. So, Is it possible to separate the audio track amplify it and > > recombine it for a new DVD? If so, how? > > > > Mike > > > When using the wizard, you can set the audio boost by clicking on > settings, selecting MPEG-4 and opening the Audio tab. > > I believe that dvdrip will separate out the audio for you, or let > you modify it. From the documentation: > > 5.9 Volume rescaling / Audio filters > > The DVD sound often is too low, so you want to increase the volume. > You can use transcode's volume rescaler for this. First the audio > track is scanned for the maximum volume. With this scan value > transcode raises the volume to the maximum possible while transcoding. > > Volume rescaling is very static, you may find the sound is still too > low, if your movie's sound is very dynamic. transcode offers some > audio filters, which adjust the volume dynamically, which you can > choose also in dvd::rip. > > You could also use all the tools dvdrip uses from the command line. > If you want to build a script to do the same job. > > Mikkel Mikkel Thanks for the information. I'll see what I can work out. Mike -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines