Or, you can save the file as a mono file. You can hit I think it's control
l for left or control r for right, take just that one speaker, copy it to
the clip board, create a new file, paste that speaker only into the file,
and save it as a mono file.
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----- Original Message -----
From: "chris hallsworth" <christopher...@gmail.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2011 5:16 AM
Subject: Re: Creating a stereo file from a mono file using gold wave
Cheers. I will try this.
Chris Hallsworth
Sent from Thunderbird
On 28/09/2011 10:11, kieran l wrote:
Hi, you go to the channel mixer, and select the mono preset for what ever
channel it's coming out of..
Hope this helps.
—-
Kieran. Message sent from iPod.
On 28 Sep 2011, at 10:08, chris hallsworth<christopher...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Hi all.
How do I create a mono file from a stereo file? Asking as I did a
recording which was accidentally done in stereo. As a result both my
voice and speech is coming out one channel only. I haven't as yet found
a way to create a mono file out of this using GoldWave. Thanks.
Chris Hallsworth
Sent from Thunderbird
On 28/09/2011 08:43, James Scholes wrote:
If a file is mono, it has 1 channel only. Sure, you could convert it
to a stereo audio file, but it would sound the same and you'd simply be
inflating the file size.
There are effects which can add a pseudo-stereo field to mono audio,
but in the end you'll still have one channel stretched across the
stereo spectrum, rather than true 2-channel sound.
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