Author
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Topic: Audio re-recording
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Bill Brandenstein
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1632
From: California
Registered: Aug 2007
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posted November 03, 2011 07:34 PM
The sound doesn't generally go bad, but rather as you suggested something better is found. For example, later Derann prints can sound relatively muddy, but when re-recorded from a digital source, can sound quite amazing. Another reason is the sound is not in the viewer's desired language, or the print was originally made for silent viewing but someone had sound stripes added and thus a dub is possible. Or it's a mono print but a stereo source is available. So, lots of potential reasons.
In fact, I've only had the sound go bad once on a print, and was probably that way for many, many years -- so it would be incorrect to say it "went" bad. Rather, it was exposed to a strong magnetic field at some point, erasing a moment of sound every few seconds. The solution was to find a duplicate print and "transfer" the good sound to the other. (I used a computer sound card, not two projectors, to do this.)
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