In North America and Japan, select 60 Hz.
NOTE: Think of an “audio component” as an audio channel in a clip.įinding and modifying enhancement settings is a bit more difficult in the 10.3 update in fact, it confused me to the point that I couldn’t find it during a recent corporate training. If your audio clip has more than one audio component (for example, a dual mono clip), select an individual component, then proceed with the enhancements. IMPORTANT: Audio enhancement works on the component level, not the clip level. To correct these problems, you need to automatically enhance audio in the Audio inspector. If the clip contains moderate problems, these appear in yellow next to Audio Analysis in the Audio Enhancements section of the Audio inspector after the clip is imported. When you import a clip with the “Analyze and fix audio problems” import option selected, only severe audio problems are corrected.
NOTE: Clips must be analyzed in the Browser. If you decide to import files without checking this box, you can analyze and fix your audio later by selecting the clips in the Browser and choosing: Modify > Analyze and Fix then checking the Analyze and fix audio problems check box. When this is checked, Final Cut checks every imported audio clip for levels, hum and noise then applies filters to correct any problems found. When you import any audio, whether a stand-alone clip or part of a synced audio/video clip, there’s a checkbox in the Media Import window that enables automatic audio correction: “Analyze and fix audio problems.” Audio Enhancements are a feature in Final Cut Pro X that automatically analyze audio during import to determine if it is too soft, too noisy or has hum, then automatically corrects for those problems.