2013

Table Of Contents
84
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Filter graphic
The frequencies are listed in ascending order from left to right. The height of the curve
represents the amount of a specific frequency in the entire sound. The blue curve (1)
shows the original frequency response, the yellow curve (2) displays the corrected
frequency response, i.e. the frequency response the spectrum has after applying the
filter.
The pink curve (3) is the filter curve, its height determines to what extent the
respective frequency should be amplified or attenuated. When using SoundCloner as
a filter this curve is a combination of the desired frequency response ( = content of
the SoundClone preset) and the current frequency response. The means the red curve
will always look different regardless of the object when using the same preset.
The filter curve can be drawn using the mouse in the filter graphic. Draw or rotate a
straight line by pressing and holding the "Shift" key.
Click on the Magnifying glass icon (4) to change zoom mode. Zoom in using the left
mouse button, zoom out using Ctrl + left mouse button. You can move zoom areas by
holding down the left mouse button.
Click on the pen icon to change back to draw mode. "Reset" resets the red filter curve
to neutral, i.e. to be on a straight line with the initial position.
Removing audio distortions with SoundCloner
Sometimes the DeNoiser isn't the right tool for removing certain kinds of noise
interference. For example if the noise doesn't occur anywhere "alone" in the recording
it is hard to get a sample to use, or if the noise is particularly loud the DeNoiser filters
too little of the useful signal resulting in a hollow, artificial sound.
Some noise interference consists of a few frequencies, and often only one frequency
(pure tone, such as the "pips" on the radio) A typical example of this is a constant,