

This is the first time this has happened. So after the second failed attempt, I rendered the whole video out of Premiere directly, and it worked great. Timeline plays back the audio fine, between these two failed renders I exported a test clip directly out of Premiere and it was fine. I rendered the video twice out of Media Encoder, and both times all the other audio tracks turned out fine, but the one track wasn't rendered into the finished product. This week's video turned out without any background music. I exported a video using a nested audio sequence on one of my tracks that worked fine in another video (I make a weekly show, and I'm using most of the same elements in each video, except the subject matter each week changes). Here's a link to the clip in question I have had the same problem recently, using CS5.5. I'm guessing a bad card could be the culprit, but I don't undertsand how it can cause this kind of a problem. Footage shot the next day on a different card is fine. All 39 clips recorded on this one card have no audio when I run them thgrough Media Encoder. I've tried recording test clips on my Sony NX5 (the camera all of these clips were shot with) and I cannot replicate the issue. Is it possible AMECS6 isn't including some information needed to play the audio properly? I can't believe I'm the only one out there with this problem. I have tried the same clip on a third machine running media encoder CS5 with the settings and it works.Īnother odd thing, the file size created by AMECS6 is 70.0MB, the file size created by AMECS5 is 70.1MB with the exact same settings.

This enables you to reset the audio without restarting the computer.I have tried this on a second machine running media encoder CS6 and I get the same result. You'll need to enter your password to use this code. Sudo kill -9 ps ax|grep 'coreaudio' | awk '' Open Terminal by clicking on "Go" and then "Utilities." Select the Terminal icon and enter the following code into the Terminal:

Make sure that the Mute checkbox located in the lower right corner is unchecked. For instance, if you are using built-in speakers, you should have "Internal Speakers" highlighted. Click the "Output" tab and make sure that the proper sound output device is selected. Shut down your MacBook and restart your computer if restarting your audio editing program doesn't work, or if the problem is with generic system sounds.Ĭlick "Go" and then "Utilities" followed by "Disk Utility." Select your hard disk from the list of options on the left, and then click "Repair Disk Permissions." Sometimes, corrupted permissions can cause problems with audio.Ĭlick "System Preferences" in the dock and then click "Sound," located under the Hardware section.
