Hi,
I spend a couple of hours troubleshooting this, so I thought I'd share this.
After ripping a particularly badly scratched CD I noticed that the ripping speed never exceeded 8x anymore. Before, I'd get up to 32x.
My first step was to blame dbPoweramp (sorry!), but after some fooling around I found out that the problem was elsewhere. My Sony optiarc 7240S was mapped to a Secondary IDE device and was stuck in PIO mode, which explains the slowness. Windows does this after it receives too many errors on that particular IDE channel. Fixing that was not so easy, because there is no way to force the mode from the Device Manager GUI.
I'm running dbPoweramp on Windows Home Server, which is a variant of Windows Server 2003. From a driver perspective, this is very close to Windows XP, so anyone with similar problems may try the same fix that solved it for me: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/817472/
Basically, you de-install the driver to force a new configuration. It takes two boots. I'd be happy to get a faster solution, because I'm sure this will happen again someday.
I spend a couple of hours troubleshooting this, so I thought I'd share this.
After ripping a particularly badly scratched CD I noticed that the ripping speed never exceeded 8x anymore. Before, I'd get up to 32x.
My first step was to blame dbPoweramp (sorry!), but after some fooling around I found out that the problem was elsewhere. My Sony optiarc 7240S was mapped to a Secondary IDE device and was stuck in PIO mode, which explains the slowness. Windows does this after it receives too many errors on that particular IDE channel. Fixing that was not so easy, because there is no way to force the mode from the Device Manager GUI.
I'm running dbPoweramp on Windows Home Server, which is a variant of Windows Server 2003. From a driver perspective, this is very close to Windows XP, so anyone with similar problems may try the same fix that solved it for me: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/817472/
Basically, you de-install the driver to force a new configuration. It takes two boots. I'd be happy to get a faster solution, because I'm sure this will happen again someday.
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