Re: Ripping Fails On First Pass
No kidding ...
OK, I'll give you a chance:
Myself I have two drives and two ripping programs -- dBp (yes I am a paying customer, no I am not Spoon's cousin) and EAC. I use a second-best (in terms of secureness) solution approximately 98% of the time because I can automate it. "Second-best" in the sense that it detects less errors than the "best" would have done, and the price I pay is that I do not get issues like you get. But if something goes wrong, I try the other drive, and/or the other program.
Oh, if you did read this long: have you tried to turn on or off the option for reading the lead-out or whatever it is called, in dBp and EAC?
No kidding ...
OK, I'll give you a chance:
- dBp usually works. EAC usually works. My drives usually work. My CDs usually work. But I have ripped thousands of CDs, and sometimes, somewhere, things go wrong.
- Sometimes, the software is less than perfect. Sometimes, the firmware of the drive is less than perfect. Sometimes the CD has a pressing error even if it is new.
- CD drives need to give a result you can listen to, and will smoothen out their errors to minimize audible effects. Secure rippers are trying to get as much information out of the CD as possible. They *want* to see errors.
- If there is a glitch in the drive's firmware, some "secure" ripping software might provoke it and others might not -- depending on what instructions they give to the drive. Who is best -- the one which finds an error or the one which does not? Depends on whether there really is an error on the CD.
Myself I have two drives and two ripping programs -- dBp (yes I am a paying customer, no I am not Spoon's cousin) and EAC. I use a second-best (in terms of secureness) solution approximately 98% of the time because I can automate it. "Second-best" in the sense that it detects less errors than the "best" would have done, and the price I pay is that I do not get issues like you get. But if something goes wrong, I try the other drive, and/or the other program.
Oh, if you did read this long: have you tried to turn on or off the option for reading the lead-out or whatever it is called, in dBp and EAC?
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