On Monday 3 Apr 2017 21:06 CEST, Paul B. Mahol wrote: > On 4/3/17, William Caulfield <william.caulfi...@contentbridge.tv> wrote: >> On Sat, Apr 1, 2017 at 1:21 PM, Cecil Westerhof <ce...@decebal.nl> wrote: >> >>> I was asked to make videos during a ToastMasters contest. I had >>> ordered a microphone for this, but sadly it did not arrive in >>> time. So I needed to use the internal microphone from my Canon >>> HS60 SX. Being away about ten meters from the speakers, their >>> voices are much to soft. So I needed to pump up the audio. I did >>> this with: ffmpeg -y -i speaker.MP4 -vcodec copy -af volume=3 >>> speakerAudioInc.MP4 >>> >>> Is that the correct way, or is there a better way? >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Cecil Westerhof >>> Senior Software Engineer >>> LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof >>> _______________________________________________ >>> >> >> >> >> Not really an answer to your question, but speaking as an audio >> engineer: >> >> The boost you want is around 2.5Khz. That's where vocals are >> understood. 700hz up to 3.5khz is probably a good range. Avoid >> boosting below 400hz (muddy) and above 10Khz (zingy). >> >> I guess I'm suggesting some sort of EQ before the volume increase. >> Not sure how that is done in FFMPEG.
I tried several things. For example: -af equalizer=f=2500:width_type=h:width=999:g=40 But just volume=3 sounds (mostly) better. -- Cecil Westerhof Senior Software Engineer LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-user mailing list ffmpeg-user@ffmpeg.org http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-user To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-user-requ...@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe".