Re: dbpoweramp says drive cannot read into lead out; different results with it on
Hi,
I've had that a lot. Most likely it means that the 4 drives have different offsets.
Because most drive have a positive offset (i.e. the music starts after after the start of ripping), the last bit of music is lost (i.e. the rip stop before the music end). Using overread in lead out allow to rip beyond the rip end and therefore rip to the music end. Most CDs have NULL samples at that point, so it doesn't matter, a few CDs have noise, and therefore the tracks are different.
The way to check that is to use the AccurateRip CRC, not the rip CRC. Another way is to use a WAV comparator program (EAC has that buit in) and check that the track difference is indeed only at the very end. In most case, you will see that the difference occur in the last track at a time after the official end of the track from the TOC.
Note that on CDs that are full, the last track has often ripping errors, so you want to check that as well.
Good luck...
Jean
Hi,
I've had that a lot. Most likely it means that the 4 drives have different offsets.
Because most drive have a positive offset (i.e. the music starts after after the start of ripping), the last bit of music is lost (i.e. the rip stop before the music end). Using overread in lead out allow to rip beyond the rip end and therefore rip to the music end. Most CDs have NULL samples at that point, so it doesn't matter, a few CDs have noise, and therefore the tracks are different.
The way to check that is to use the AccurateRip CRC, not the rip CRC. Another way is to use a WAV comparator program (EAC has that buit in) and check that the track difference is indeed only at the very end. In most case, you will see that the difference occur in the last track at a time after the official end of the track from the TOC.
Note that on CDs that are full, the last track has often ripping errors, so you want to check that as well.
Good luck...
Jean
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