I detest AccurateRip. Is there any way I can fall back to (by default) to test and copy and look just for matching CRCs? If so, how?
Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
You can disable AccurateRip if it so detests you (CD Ripper >> Options >> check box next to AccurateRip).
You are aware that AccurateRip is the only method of detecting errors 100%, rereading and c2 pointers cannot. -
Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
I don't agree with this. Any read errors would create differing CRC values. No scratch would give the same thing twice. (As long as the cache is disabled.)Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
If you detest AccurateRip so much, why do you not use one of the many free CD rippers? I'd suggest EAC, but even that one has AccurateRip. Maybe you'd be happier with CDex?Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
>why don't test and copy CRCs work?
Because there are errors known as consistent errors, where the error repeats identical for each read. If you are believing a matching re-read CRC = a secure rip then you are in for a shock. If you do not believe me, go and ask this very question on somewhere like Hydrogen Audio (which is independent).Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
I would use free rippers if they handled offsets correctly. It is coming...
EAC is too fussy to set up, but I have used it a lot in the past.
I like dBpoweramp. Just not version 14. 14 is fine, but it does require work to configure, which I don't have to do with 13.5. 14 is not a major enough improvement IMO.Last edited by chinkapin; September 21, 2010, 06:39 PM.Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
chinkapin, I don't think you get it. Of course no one is going to force you to use AR, but you can basically think of AccurateRip as Test&Copy on steroids. Instead of just verifying against your one disc in your one drive you can verify against other discs in other drives. As spoon noted, this is the ONLY way to avoid consistent errors.
I don't know what additional set up R14 requires above R13.5.Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
For what it's worth, I've seen tracks verified as inaccurate but which gave out the same CRC from both my CD drives. So I can testify in court that matching CRC's are no proof of an accurate rip.
On the other hand, for the same track ripped from 2 different CD's to have matching CRC's and yet be inaccurate is indeed nearly impossible. But that's completely different (without AR, you'd need to check that CRC's match for 2 copies of the same CD).Last edited by mrgou; September 23, 2010, 08:06 PM.Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
Precisely! Just like EliC tries to explain to you, this is where AccurateRip improves over a test + copy procedure. Rather than reading 2x or 3x or 199x with the same hardware and same physical CD, you let someone else do the first one, two or 198 rips. If matching, then either
(1) the rips are the same, except that some samples for technical reasons are not part of the comparison,
or
(2) you have won the lottery.
If not matching, then dBpoweramp will fallback to the test + copy procedure.Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
Explanation:
Different write offsets will yield two masters with bitstreams which are the same except shifted a little to the right or left (and a few bits at the beginning or end of the CD chopped off).
Only with the recent updates (R14 of dBpoweramp) will they be verified as the same.Comment
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Re: Force "test and copy" and skip AccurateRip
Other tracks were accurate (I'm not sure all, but still). That was exceptional, but still, it did happen. On second thought, though, I'm no longer 100% sure both rips were made from a different drive, but I do remember seeing a second, inaccurate rip of a track with matching CRC (though, as I just said, I could have been on the same drive).Comment
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