VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. So I edited some audio in Audacity to sync up better with the video and audio of another language. There were small segments that were out of sync.

    The dvd’s audio I edited was 224kbps in AC3.

    After editing in Audacity I exported as AC3 at the same 224kbps.

    My question I’d like clarification on is:
    Will I encounter quality loss after exporting from Audacity with those settings? Should I have used FLAC or another lossless format? How best to make sure nothing is lost on export after edits?
    Quote Quote  
  2. Saving in any lossy format like AC3 always causes re-encoding. DVD accepts PCM (wav, 48 kHz) only, and no flac.
    Quote Quote  
  3. When you export from Audacity, even at the same bitrate, there can be
    some potential quality loss due to re-encoding. Here are some key points:

    1. Best practices:
    - Export to a lossless format like FLAC first
    - Then convert to AC3 if needed for final use
    - This preserves the maximum audio quality during editing

    2. Potential issues with re-encoding AC3:
    - Each re-encode can introduce slight artifacts
    - Even at the same bitrate, the encoding process isn't perfectly transparent

    3. Recommended workflow:
    - Export from Audacity to FLAC
    - Use a tool like FFmpeg to convert FLAC to AC3 at 224kbps for final output

    This approach minimizes quality loss and gives you a preservation-quality
    master file (FLAC) to work from in the future.

    Tip: try Clever-FFmpeg-GUI
    As always .. there is nothing wrong with my environment
    Quote Quote  
  4. I see, I see. Thank you very much for the insights and for the workflow recommendation. I'll redo my files accordingly. I really appreciate the advice. I am now a bit wiser.
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    United States
    Search PM
    Originally Posted by videoAI View Post
    When you export from Audacity, even at the same bitrate, there can be
    some potential quality loss due to re-encoding. Here are some key points:

    3. Recommended workflow:
    - Export from Audacity to FLAC
    - Use a tool like FFmpeg to convert FLAC to AC3 at 224kbps for final output
    That's just an extra unneeded step, exporting from Audacity directly to ac3 would result in almost identical output.

    Even a few reencodes might not perceptually reduce quality enough to notice.
    For example: https://bernholdtech.blogspot.com/2013/03/Nine-different-audio-encoders-100-pass-recom...sion-test.html
    Although the test doesn't include ac3, it should perform similarly to mp3.
    Last edited by gregalan; 2nd Aug 2025 at 06:33. Reason: clarification
    Quote Quote  
  6. Also quite important is that conversion from lossy to lossy usually require to increase bitrate - some compression errors are accumulating and may require bitrate increase so to deliver at similar quality usually we need to increase bitrate - probably nearest ac3 bitrate is 256kbps.
    Quote Quote  
  7. Originally Posted by gregalan View Post

    That's just an extra unneeded step, exporting from Audacity directly to ac3 would result in almost identical output.

    Even a few reencodes might not perceptually reduce quality enough to notice.
    For example: https://bernholdtech.blogspot.com/2013/03/Nine-different-audio-encoders-100-pass-recom...sion-test.html
    Although the test doesn't include ac3, it should perform similarly to mp3.
    Thanks for this too. I'll be reading that in detail. Thanks. Huh... Interesting...
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!