Blackmagic Design Cintel Manual De Instalación Y Funcionamiento página 70

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This guide provides a basic overview of the features on the Fairlight page, but to learn more
about all the details for each feature, refer to the DaVinci Resolve manual. The DaVinci Resolve
manual provides details on the purpose of each tool and describes how to use them in easy to
follow steps.
The Audio Timeline
Track Header
At the left of each track is a header area that displays the track number, track name, track color,
audio channels, fader value and audio meters. The track header also contains different controls
for locking and unlocking tracks, plus solo and muting controls. These controls can help to keep
your tracks organized, and let you preview individual tracks one at a time.
Tracks
Each track on the Fairlight page is divided into lanes, which show each individual channel of clip
audio for editing and mixing. The edit page hides these individual audio channels, displaying
only a single clip in the timeline to make it easier to edit multi channel sources without needing
to manage a huge number of tracks.
The track header on track A1 indicates a mono track with a single lane for mono audio, and
the A2 track header indicates a stereo track with two lanes to accommodate stereo audio
What is a Bus?
A bus is essentially a destination channel to which you can route multiple audio tracks from the
timeline, so that they are mixed together into a single signal that can be controlled via a single
channel strip.
Main Bus
'Main busses' are typically the primary output of a program and each new project you create
starts out with a single 'main bus', to which all tracks are routed by default. The 'main bus'
combines all of the tracks in the timeline into one signal so that you can adjust the overall level
of the audio mix once you have adjusted the level of each individual track.
Sub Bus
'Sub busses' allow you to combine multiple tracks of audio that belong to the same category
such as dialogue, music or effects so that everything in that category can be mixed as a single
audio signal. For example, if you have five dialogue tracks, you can route the output of all five
dialogue tracks to a 'submix bus', and the level of all dialogue can then be mixed with a single
set of controls. This submix can be rendered separately or sent to the main bus for render.
Working with Clips in DaVinci Resolve
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