Left-click to select the clip you'd like to edit.
Right-click on the clip and unlink the audio from the video
Highlight just the audio clip, then click on "keyframe", above the timeline
On the far left of the keyframe work area, select either "fix/enhance" or "volume" (I'll use volume in this example)
You'll now see a volume slider on the left and keyframe controls on the right (the central diamond adds a keyframe at the position of the playhead on the timeline, the left and right arrows jump to previous or next keyframe)
You use the controls under the preview window to watch/listen to your video, pausing the play wherever you like to add a keyframe
Once you added the keyframe at that point (by clicking on the diamond), you use the slider to adjust the db level
Keep changing the db level as you wish (note that you can see the "handles" changing on the audio clip on your timeline as you make changes in the keyframe work area)
When you're finished, you may either choose to "fix/enhance" (denoise) your audio, or return to the timeline by clicking the x in the upper right corner of the keyframe work area
Once you're back in the main edit window, you can either re-link your audio to the video, or you can click on the video track, click "keyframe", and you've opened up a new set video editing tools which you can use just as precisely as your audio tools
If you find this new and helpful, I'm glad. If this is old news to you, sorry for the distraction...
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Mar 16. 2016 12:49
Dan
Power Director 21-Ultimate
v 21.0.3111.0
XPS-8940, Win-10 64-bit,
Intel Core i9-10900 processor
(10 core, 20M Cache),
32GB DDR4 RAM, 2TB M.2 PCIe NVME SSD, 2TB 7200 RPM SATA HDD,
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 SUPER 8GB GDDR6