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Procedure for fading-in
Here’s how to fade-in the IN–OUT region of track 1.
1 Register the IN and OUT times.
Register the start and end times of the desired fade-
in. (→p.97)
2 Select the fade-in command.
In the [TRACK] “EditTrk” tab page, set “EditType”
to “FadeTrack.”
3 Select the fade-in curve.
Press the “Mode” button to access the dialog box.
For this example, select the “A” curve, press the
“OK” button to return to the [TRACK] “EditTrk”
tab page.
4 Select the fade-in destination track number.
Set “DestTrack” to track 1.
5 Execute the editing command.
Press the “Exec.” button. The display will ask
“AreYouSure?,” so press the “Yes” button to exe-
cute the command.
When processing is completed, the display will
indicate “Completed.” Press the “OK” button.
6 Verify that the data was faded correctly.
Press the [IN/LOC1] key to play back from the IN
location, and verify that the data was faded-in cor-
rectly.
You can use Undo to return to the state before exe-
cuting the command. (→p.99)
The longer the specified range (IN–OUT), the
longer this command will take to process until the
“Completed” display appears.
Procedure for fading-out
Here’s how to fade-out the IN–OUT region of track 1.
1 Register the IN and OUT times.
Register the start and end times of the desired fade-
out. (→p.97)
2 Select the fade-out command.
In the [TRACK] “EditTrk” tab page, set “EditType”
to “FadeTrack.”
3 Select the fade-out curve.
Press the “Mode” button to access the dialog box.
For this example, select the “D” curve, press the
“OK” button to return to the [TRACK] “EditTrk”
tab page.
4 Select the fade-out destination track number.
Set “DestTrack” to track 1.
5 Execute the editing command.
Press the “Exec.” button. The display will ask
“AreYouSure?,” so press the “Yes” button to exe-
cute the command.
When processing is completed, the display will
indicate “Completed.” Press the “OK” button.
6 Verify that the data was faded correctly.
Press the [IN/LOC1] key to play back from the IN
location, and verify that the data was faded-out
correctly.
You can use Undo to return to the state before exe-
cuting the command. (→p.99)
The longer the specified range (IN–OUT), the
longer this command will take to process until the
“Completed” display appears.
Boosting to the optimal level: Normalize
Track
This command boosts the specified region (IN–OUT) of
track data that was recorded at a lower than optimal
level, so that the level is raised to the maximum volume
without clipping.
• The peak of the audio data in the IN–OUT region is
detected, and the audio level of the IN–OUT region
is boosted so that the peak reaches the maximum
allowable level.
• You can normalize either a single track, or adjacent
tracks simultaneously.
If data recorded at an extremely low level is nor-
malized, any noise included in that region will also
be boosted.
Procedure for normalizing
Here’s how to normalize the IN–OUT region of track 1.
1 Register the IN and OUT times.
Register the start and end times of the region you
wish to normalize. (→p.97)
2 Select the normalize command.
In the [TRACK] “EditTrk” tab page, set “EditType”
to “NormalizeTrack.”
3 Select the normalize destination track number.
Set “DestTrack” to track 1.
4 Execute the editing command.
Press the “Exec.” button. The display will ask
“AreYouSure?,” so press the “Yes” button to exe-
cute the command.
When processing is completed, the display will
indicate “Completed.” Press the “OK” button.
5 Verify that the data was processed correctly.
Press the [IN/LOC1] key to play back from the IN
location, and verify that the data was normalized
correctly.
You can use Undo to return to the state before exe-
cuting the command. (→p.99)
The longer the specified range (IN–OUT), the
longer this command will take to process until the
“Completed” display appears.
DestTrack
DestTrack
Basic operation
Track editing