Getting back in sync
You may make an edit that causes your tracks to go out of sync with one another, and you may not notice it until much later, after making many other edits.
This recipe addresses the situation when the Sync Break Indicators begin at a point in the sequence and then continue on down to the end. For emphasis, unlike a sync break caused by a Slip or Slide, where the Sync Break Indictors are isolated to one segment or one area, in this instance, the Sync Break Indicators ripple down to the very end of the sequence.
The solution to a sync break problem caused by adding or removing material to one or more tracks without also adding or removing the same duration of material to all the other tracks is corrected by doing the opposite to those same tracks. In other words, if you added material to a track and that caused the tracks to become out of sync, then you must remove material from that track to regain sync (and vice versa).
While any of the duration-changing operations (Ripple...