I've decided to use Sonar's built-in CD burning routine. But I've already run into one glitch and I hope to avoid any others. The one glitch I ran into is, despite doing all my mixdowns at 44.1k/16 bit (indicated, at least!), I come to find that the audio is actually 32 bits, and now I have to convert it to load the audio file.
I took a look at my Edit>Preferences>Audio>Driver Settings, and I see where I have my M-Audio Delta card's ASIO drivers loaded (what I want), but that below that the bit rate is set to 24 (with 64 bit precision checked), but it's grayed out, so I can't change it even if I wanted, and besides apparently my .wav files are being recorded at 32 bits anyway.
This is an annoyance, more than anything else, because now I have the extra step of having to convert my audio files to 16 bits. Still I'm curious what's going on, you know?
Except! Here's the stumbling point -- even after I go and do the Utilities>Change Audio Format to 16 bits, when I try to load this new file into Sonar's CD burner, I still get the pop-up error message telling me the file is 32 bits! Okay, what's going on here? Is the file 16 bits or 32 bits? And if it's 32 bits, even though the Sonar Interface is indicating 44.1/16, and I've just gone and saved the audio file to 16 bits, just why is this? Why is the file still 32 bits?
This is kinda majorly annoying.
But anyway, setting that stumbling block aside for a moment, I'm curious what sort of housekeeping you do prior to loading your files into Sonar's CD burning utility (assuming at this point it can even be used). What I'm thinking about doing is renaming each file in the .cwp audio directory -- or at least making a copy of it -- to the actual name of the song. Since right now, they're all bounced tracks, and indicate such in their file names. And then saving this new song.wav file name to the same directory that the .cwp file is saved to. That seems to be a fairly organized way to go about it. What do you typically do?
And if you have any idea how I can get Sonar's CD utility to recognize that the files are 16 bit -- or if they aren't, to indeed save them as 16 bit -- I'd be glad to "hear" from you on that, as well. Thanks!