I hope someone can help me understand these results. The EAC rip is a good rip, according to EAC.
The AccurateRip results in the EAC ripping log say:
No tracks could be verified as accurate
You may have a different pressing from the one(s) in the database
When I Verify the .cue in CueTools, CueTools' single line report in its window is:
AR: rip not accurate (0/4)
The .accurip report says:
[AccurateRip ID: 000e5094-00729308-9d091a0a] found.
Track [ CRC ] Status
01 [9cb2e7b7] (0/4) No match
02 [408078d3] (0/4) No match
03 [ec618f65] (0/4) No match
04 [01a58682] (0/4) No match
05 [f40f7a78] (0/4) No match
06 [d32030f9] (0/4) No match
07 [4523a46c] (0/4) No match
08 [c4638237] (0/4) No match
09 [798f0e55] (0/4) No match
10 [45058c6b] (0/4) No match
So, CueTools clearly states that the rip is not accurate. The .accurip report simply says "no match". But EAC's ripping log says it could be a different pressing, which is a very different statement from what CueTools says.
What is the conclusion? Is it that this is a different pressing, or that it is an inaccurate rip? The AccurateRip results in the EAC log saying it could be a different pressing seems credible, since this is a 1984 Australian pressing so likely not common. It's likely that the pressing in the database is a US or UK disk.
The AccurateRip results in the EAC ripping log say:
No tracks could be verified as accurate
You may have a different pressing from the one(s) in the database
When I Verify the .cue in CueTools, CueTools' single line report in its window is:
AR: rip not accurate (0/4)
The .accurip report says:
[AccurateRip ID: 000e5094-00729308-9d091a0a] found.
Track [ CRC ] Status
01 [9cb2e7b7] (0/4) No match
02 [408078d3] (0/4) No match
03 [ec618f65] (0/4) No match
04 [01a58682] (0/4) No match
05 [f40f7a78] (0/4) No match
06 [d32030f9] (0/4) No match
07 [4523a46c] (0/4) No match
08 [c4638237] (0/4) No match
09 [798f0e55] (0/4) No match
10 [45058c6b] (0/4) No match
So, CueTools clearly states that the rip is not accurate. The .accurip report simply says "no match". But EAC's ripping log says it could be a different pressing, which is a very different statement from what CueTools says.
What is the conclusion? Is it that this is a different pressing, or that it is an inaccurate rip? The AccurateRip results in the EAC log saying it could be a different pressing seems credible, since this is a 1984 Australian pressing so likely not common. It's likely that the pressing in the database is a US or UK disk.
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