Export 24 Bit Source WAV as 32 Bit Float Before Converting In Adobe Media Encoder?

Hi,
I'm exporting movies from After Effects as .avi and wondering what I need to do to preserve my audio as close to the source as possible. My source audio file is 24bit / 48K. I am using Adobe Media Encoder to encode the video/audio as YouTube Widescreen HD, but since After Effects doesn't offer 24bit export, should I export as 32bit float? And is this going to alter my audio in any way before it goes to Adobe Media Encoder?
I've read about this on some different forums, but am still not clear about it..
Thanks,
Henry

Hi Dave,
Thanks for your response. The issue that I'm running into with Adobe Premiere is that I've created "odd" frame rates in After Effects to sync my animations in "time" with my music. For this particular animation, the BPM of my music is 72.5, so I've used half of that, 36.25 FPS to perfectly line up my animation in After Effects. It locks right in with the BPM. I've tested this out on YouTube, where my videos are headed, and it works perfect. The problem is that Premiere is not using the source (After Effects) frame rate and and I have to choose from a set list of frame rates. Is Premiere limited to these frame rates? If that's the case, then I guess the only other option for me is to export from After Effects as 32bit float and test to see if their is even a difference from the source WAV. Most people are not going to be monitoring with high end D/A converters anyways, so it's probably not even going to make a difference. However, I have put a lot of work into this project and I want to deliver the best possible master.

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