Tutoriales de FL Studio 20/Best Export Settings - Why Does My Mix Sound Bad After Exporting? - FL Studio
Best Export Settings - Why Does My Mix Sound Bad After Exporting? - FL Studio

Best Export Settings - Why Does My Mix Sound Bad After Exporting? - FL Studio

In The Mix10 min13 mar 2018
4 capitulos
  • Introduction and Video Overview(0'000'36)
    The video covers two main topics: how to export correctly in FL Studio and why exported audio sometimes sounds different from the mix inside FL Studio.
    • Mixed audio sounds great inside FL Studio but terrible after exporting • Low end becomes weak and unclear • High end sounds sharp and fatiguing rather than clear and defined
    The creator will demonstrate proper export settings and explain solutions to the audio quality problem.
    Two distinct sections: export settings demonstration, then troubleshooting why exported audio sounds different.
  • FL Studio Export Settings and Setup(0'364'53)
    • Press Ctrl + to select the entire song • Highlight song length by left-clicking and dragging • Go to File menu and select Export, then choose WAV file format
    • Set Mode to 'Song' to export the whole song • Check total time displayed to verify correct selection • Tail option determines if audio cuts exactly or leaves remainder for reverb decay • Use 'Cut Remainder' for mastering, 'Leave Remainder' for mixing to export reverb tails
    • WAV file provides best sound quality and is recommended 99 times out of 100 • Use 16-bit for CD distribution • 24-bit is widely accepted across streaming sites • 32-bit offers highest quality for archiving and future bit-depth reduction
    • Set quality as high as possible unless computer performance is limited • Quality above 64 provides excellent results • 512 is recommended but may be overkill • Enable 'Trim PDC delay' to ensure plugin delay compensation stays in time
  • Master Effects and Rendering Options(4'536'33)
    • Enable Master Effects so all master effects are active during export • Enable Insert Effects to include all delays, reverbs, EQ, and compression • Dithering option only appears for 16-bit output and can be handled by mastering plugins
    • Start rendering shows progress and allows cancellation via abort button • Background rendering frees up computer to do other tasks but takes longer • Start rendering is faster as it uses all computer resources
    After rendering, open file explorer and drag the exported file back in to verify correct length and check for clipping or distortion.
    Limiters like Slate FGX have built-in dithering and resolution settings, allowing full control over output quality without relying on FL Studio's dithering.
  • Why Exported Audio Sounds Different(6'3310'02)
    99% of the time, the problem is computer audio processing and media player enhancements, not the mix or mastering skills.
    • Media players like Groove Music, Windows Media Player, and Beats have built-in equalizers and audio enhancements turned on by default • These enhancements boost, cut, or widen audio and affect playback quality • Disable all media player enhancements in settings
    • Computer built-in audio outputs may have poor-quality drivers • Different devices sound different: laptop speakers sound worse than phone headphones or car audio • Using an audio interface bypasses poor computer audio management and restores quality
    • The issue is likely a technical hardware or software problem, not mixing mistakes • Don't blame your skills if exported audio sounds bad compared to FL Studio playback • Test on multiple devices to confirm: phone, headphones, car audio, or external audio interface