Comments

PeterDuke wrote on 3/28/2010, 7:04 PM
The saved version becomes a second take. What happens if you change to the first take (original); is it sped up too? IsTake 2 still sped up when you reselect it?

Have you tried a different audio editor? Audacity is free. Audition trial works for 30 days.

What version of Vegas and Windows?
China wrote on 3/29/2010, 2:47 AM
This may not be relevant, but what sample rate are you editing in, within the audio editor, (44.1k / 48k) and then what are you saving as? It MAY be that editing in 44.1k then using it in a project looking for 48k might be a cause. It's a really long shot, but worth a quick poke around. Good luck!

Cheers,

China.
gwailo wrote on 3/29/2010, 3:59 AM
You have a sound card driver frequency problem.

Vegas is working at one sampling frequency.
Your Audio Editor is working at a differenct sampling frequency.

These are not file or project frequency settings. They are the frequency settings built into how your program accesses your soundcard.

When you edit in your Audio Editor your sound card resets itself to interface with your soundcard at its preferred frequency.

When you jump back to Vegas, vegas fails to reset your sound card's output frequency.

Vegas only checks / sets output frequency of the soundcard driver when it's first loaded. That's why you need to reload Vegas to fix the problem.

Try to find / use the same ASIO drivers in both Vegas and your Audio Editing program.

Try updating your soundcard's drivers.

Also try and select 'close audio and MIDI ports when not the active application'

or maybe unselect it.

I've had similar problems when I had Vegas using 1 soundcard, and Sound Forge using a different sound card. The problem is somewhere in the drivers / program / windows interface.

You'll have to experiment to find the solution.