Wav Bit Depth Fl Studio

Wav Bit Depth Fl Studio 4,6/5 7441 reviews

Hi there,i have a question about working with the 32bit Buffering on flstudio.I use Kontakt5 and it really annoyed me, that when i used to many sounds at the same time and it became louder, it sounded really distorted. I found the function to activate 32bit buffering on my flstudio file and got rid of the problem when playing the song in flstudio. But like i suspected, when i rendered it in 16bit wav or mp3 file, the distortion/overdrive was back.Now i could just mix it down a bit and make it less loud, but i want my song to be as loud as possible.My Question now is: is there a way to export it as mp3 oder 16bit wav, but keep it as loud as the project file originally is?

  1. Bit Depth Image
  2. Wav Bit Depth Fl Studio 10

Bit Depth Image

Is there a render setting i overlooked? Or do i really have to make everything less loud.Thanks for your help. By the way, i have a question about this.As I am not a professional on mixing and mastering (and far from it as my final mixdown of my productions can be rather. Well not just professional), and because i have to export the project with 16bit int (still 512-point sinc though) if i want to test the track on my car hifi as i have kind of a cheap player that can't play high bit rates even though kind of good speakers there, i sometimes have settled for it for the internet upload too. But nowadays i also have exported the 32bit floats from FLS, and the thing is, i haven't noticed super big differences between these two types of wav files anyways. Maybe.Can you guys really see some huge differences between those two?

Wav Bit Depth Fl Studio

No, not me; I did use 16-bit int for a while, but I actually have been using 24-bit int for a few years. Any differences I may or may not have heard are really minor (w.r.t. 16-bit int/24-bit int/32-bit float).You'd sooner hear quality issues if you decrease the bit rate (e.g.

Wav Bit Depth Fl Studio 10

224 kbps) upon encoding than if you decrease the bit depth (16-bit int, 24-bit int, 32-bit float; basically bit resolution, analogous to pixel resolution) upon render.-However, whenever I have rendered 32-bit float WAV files, encoding into VBR1 MP3 via WinLAME gives me a silent MP3. My 24-bit int WAV files don't run into that issue.