I agree that Audition is the best solution. There is a feature that allows you to sample some of the noise and then simply remove it from the audio. It's worked great for me. It also allows you to isolate specific noises, like bumps, phone rings, clicks, clunks in the background and delete them, even if they reside on top of important dialog. The feature kind of works like the Photoshop "heal" brush, only for audio. Audition is nicer than a simple EQ because the "cleaning" doesn't remove the entire band of EQ for the sound. But if it's applied to strongly, it can create funky (in a bad way) audio artifacts.
I think I did a provideocoalition.com tutorial on using it. If not, I might have a good idea for an upcoming one!
Steve
On Dec 11, 2013, at 10:31 AM, Ronald Loneker <rloneker@cse.edu> wrote:
We have a video that was shot where there is a pretty clear hiss on the audio track - the audio was clean during the test recording but for the actual program we have a hiss.Hi Everyone -I mostly lurk on the list but occasionally I post a question...
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