[App_rpt-users] Playing mp3 files in app_rpt
Bob
kk6ecm at gmail.com
Wed May 28 04:15:07 UTC 2014
You make a good point, and I should have said more about my application.
My issue just happens to be with the ARRL Audio News which uses mp3 format,
and the desire to play it once per week via the repeater.
I am experimenting with both the add-on (thanks for the head-up regarding
the output level), and a script to convert the mp3 to ulaw format.
Thanks,
r/Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: Ken [mailto:ke2n at cs.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2014 5:50 PM
To: app_rpt-users at ohnosec.org
Cc: kk6ecm at gmail.com
Subject: Re: [App_rpt-users] Playing mp3 files in app_rpt
Asterisk/app_rpt will play MP3 files alright, using the add-on, although,
you may need to change the output level.
In format_mp3.c
#define OUTSCALE 32768
Seems to be about right (I think the original was 8192 but YMMV as they say)
I used mp3 for bulletins for a while - I even bought a copy of Adobe
Audition CS5.5 (now there is version 6) so I could make "real" MP3 files.
MP3's made by Audacity sound *really* weird.
MP3 files contain a frequency spectrum that depends on the sampling rate of
the recording. This is a separate rate from the Bit Rate of the MP3
playback. If you reduce the playback bitrate of an MP3 file, you may still
have frequency components up through perhaps 12 or 15 kHz, you just get more
distortion and artifacts. All those frequency components above about 3.6 KHz
will be ignored by Asterisk, which runs its sound system at 8 k-samples/sec.
This may produce some strange effects since you are playing back stuff that
Asterisk can't "hear". The distortion below 3.6 kHz comes through of
course...
To get a file like ARRL Audio News (44 kHz sample rate, in stereo, with an
MP3 bit rate of 192k) to play properly on asterisk, you need some software
that can re-sample the original file down to 8 k sampling rate (and 8k bit
rate). That way the playback spectrum of the MP3 will have components only
up through about 3.4 kHz, which is quite compatible with asterisk. Adobe
Audition 5.5 (and later) can do this.
Audacity will also re-sample (at the "Project Rate"), but it is best used to
make ulaw files, not MP3's; but it's free.
If the original recording was frequency-limited then no re-sampling of the
recording is needed. For example, my NWS weather podcasts are a computer
voice designed for telephone bandwidth, but distributed as MP3's. Those
MP3's played through asterisk sound just like the original played on any MP3
player.
Lots of fun
73
Ken
More information about the App_rpt-users
mailing list