Comments

rraud wrote on 3/4/2006, 3:48 PM
Burning a CD-A "should" re-sample (convert) to 44.1.
Maybe I'm missing something here but, have you tried changing the sample rate in Sound Forge via Fie> Properties> Format & change the playback sample rate to 44.1k (or what ever the intial record rate was, to get the correct speed/pitch) and then re-sample to 44.1.
brandondrury1 wrote on 3/4/2006, 4:59 PM
Changing the sample rate settings in Vegas seams to do nothing.

I have resampled in Sound Forge, but even when doing the full resample (and not just changing the tag) the file will still be very slow when I burn the cd.

With the files that were mistakenly recorded at 48K, they only play correctly when my master clock is set to 48K no matter if I resample them to 44.1K, 48K, 96K, etc.

Brandon
Chienworks wrote on 3/4/2006, 7:41 PM
The correct way to use a 48K file in Vegas to create a 44.1K CD is to drop the file on the timeline and burn the CD. No other steps are necessary. If you have a file that is misbehaving then the file is the problem, not Vegas.
Geoff_Wood wrote on 3/4/2006, 8:29 PM
Changing the 'sample rate settings' should confuse everything nicely.

In Vegas (or CD-Architect) you can have whatever file format, sample-rate, and bit-depth you like on the timeline.

You burn it straight from the timeline to CD - the conversion is done automatically and invisibly.

Or in Vegas you can render it to a WAV file with the specs as 44K1 and 16-bit, then export it to another CD-burning app..

If you must resample it in SF, then that will no change the pitch or tempo. I suspect you are over-complicating things and in the process actually fiddling with some setting to give you your wonky results.

geoff