Rob, I can't get as accurate with control left and right arrow even if I set the scrub to 0.010 seconds. What I can do though, although it's strange, is to insert a dummy file at the end of the file I am editing to make the entire file long enough to cause the pixel scrub to be adjusted down to the level I want. Thanks for the help. Neal From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Rob Meredith Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2012 12:14 PM To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: Question about scrubbing Neal, Remember, pixel scrubbing (done with left/right arrows) is not normal scrubbing (done with Control and left/right arrows.) So, scrub settings do not apply when the arrow keys are used in the wave view. What is happening is the zoom ratio for short wave files is so low that one pixel does not represent much data. F10 doesn't help because you cannot zoom out beyond about half of the size of the window. In other words, you are zoomed out as far out as possible already. Recommendation: try Ctrl+Left Arrow and Ctrl+Right Arrow instead. Rob From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Neal Ewers Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2012 11:31 AM To: 'sr' Subject: [studiorecorder] Question about scrubbing Rob and others. Why is it that when I press the right and left arrow keys to scrub in a wav file at 44.1, 16 bit, It scrubs the amount of the file I have set in settings? However, if I am in, say a shorter, 30 second file and use the arrow keys, the cursor hardly moves at all. I can press F10 until the llamas come home, don't have any cows, but it doesn't seem to make any difference. I have also tried shift F10 which doesn't seem to help. This is in Windows 7 64 bit, and I don't remember having this at all in XP. What am I experiencing here? Thanks much. Neal P.S. Don't have any llamas either.