![]() I don't know if these are pops in the vinyl or just static buildup. The only other thing I just thought of when writing this is static. I have about 10-12 transfers sitting that need processing and cannot get to them. I tried simply running the file as high as I dared in CR (around 60) and it seems to have gotten rid of 99% of what's left but unfortunate at this point the transients have been affected to the point that I can hear the beat on the inverted output.Īnyhow, I'm not sure what else I can try and this is starting to get a bit frustrating. I tried the demo which does not allow saving, and I definitely don't want to spend 100+ dollars for something marginally better in some places, and worse in others. I tried izotope rx and it seems to be able to get rid of a few things CR missed, but at the same time missed stuff CR got. I am not sure if the software is just not cutting it anymore, or another issue entirely. That worked for a few recordings, but the issue started to come back again after a few rips. I then would run those small sections through CR again at 40-60. I then decided to listen through the file and mark anything that's left. I kept running the file through CR until there was 0 repairs and definitely helped diminish the louder of the ticks and pops I was hearing. ![]() At first I thought maybe my latest system revision has made the sound more revealing, but this issue is still present on various systems I own.Īnyways, I decided to do click repair at a bit higher setting (18-30) as it didn't seem to do too much transient damage. Many of these clicks that I was still hearing were well buried in the waveform and can't just be selected and removed. I am getting quite a few leftovers here and there after processing. Lately with click repair I have been having problems. I want to resurrect this thread instead of creating "yet another clickrepair thread". If you hear anything that resembles the beat or rhythm of the music, then you have set the threshold too high and you are changing the fast transients in the music in addition to the clicks and pops. You should hear mostly silence, with random clicks. You can listen to the unchanged original, the changed output, or the difference (only the repaired or changed bits). The best way to check for this is to output only the repairs. 99.999% of the music is totally unaffected. Even then, I don't see how it could be described as veiled. For most music, it doesn't happen until the setting is at least 20. I've never seen that happen on any recording unless the setting is at 10 to 15 or more. If you set the threshold too high, then you can start falsely identifying transients in the music (fast guitar plucks, sharp horn blasts and such) as clicks and they will be processed just as a real click would be. At a setting of 1, only very obvious clicks would be identified. All the rest of the bits are exactly the same as the unprocessed file. The only bits that are changed are the few right at a click or pop. I have verified this by comparing the before and after files (subtracting one from the other). ClickRepair does not affect the music at all, except for what it identifies as a click or pop.
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