![]() ![]() How this happened I don’t know, but it could be something as simple as your disk was unable to keep up with the write speed of the CFA data and chunks of the CFA file are missing. Now, for some reason, and I don’t know why, I wish I did know why, your CFA file had errors introduced into it when you first imported it to Premiere and Premiere was doing the conversion from the encoded MP3 data to the uncompressed CFA data. So, now you know how the Media Cache system handles MP3’s. The same CFA files is also used in After Effects, as you are finding out. ![]() mp3 connection is held and stored in the Media Cache Database, and used in all Premiere Pro projects from that point on. So when you play back an MP3 in Premiere, you are actually playing back the. ![]() CFA file, and the Media Cache database makes a 1:1 connection between the. This is stored in the Media Cache files location as a. In Premiere, that is done automatically when importing Mp3’s. MP3’s in Premiere need to be converted from the perceptual encoding format that they are stored in, into uncompressed audio data (PCM data, like the common. The next time the any project is opened the required files will automatically be rebuilt. The easiest way to do this is to hold the shift key on launch of Premiere and select “Delete Media Cache” Option. Yes I know it is a pain to rebuild, but it is the quick and easy answer. The quick answer is that you will want to delete your media cache to fix this. I’ll answer this and answer it broadly for any user that come across this thread in the future so it might be able to help. ![]()
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