I've been ripping my CD collection to FLAC and am most of the way through. I've been following the guidelines and things are going pretty well in general - great software - thanks! However, about 1 in 20 CDs rumble along at 0.2x and then either run out of time or I cancel the rip. I've been setting these aside to deal with later. What should I do? Most of the CDs appear to be in excellent condition, by the way.
Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
The CD drive self decides what to rip at, some drives (such as Opticarc) drop to this speed 0.2x, others maintain their speed. -
Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
If you have C2 enabled, you might try re-ripping these problem discs with C2 turned off. Some drives have poor (or non-existent) C2 support. With my LG Blu-Ray burner, I have to have C2 turned off because it reports too many false positives.Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
The CD drive normally rips at a reasonable speed. I've done a few hundred CDs now. It's just that a minority of CDs rip at a tediously slow speed and there appears to be something wrong. These are the ones that I've set aside.
I have disabled C2.
Are there any other changes I can make to the settings to get these ripped? (They include some of my favourites)Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
Under the Options menus, you can change the time dBpoweramp allows a track to rip before aborting. You can set it to never abort, and leave a CD overnight.
I can but guess: CD drives spin down according to certain parameters. Uneven CDs (slightly inhomogeneous mass distribution, or slightly off-center hole) might be one reason. If these rules are not well-tweaked, it could lead to unreasonable results.
I don't think that C2 is the issue, unless you get many frames to re-read.Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
If you have access to a second CD drive, I would try ripping these problem CDs with it. I keep two CD drives in my desktop for this very reason. If one drive doesn't want to rip one of my CDs, the second one will.
One other thing I would suggest is to carefuly inspect the disc surface. If there are no scratches or fingerprints, hold the CD up to a strong light. If any light shines through several pin-*****-sized holes, you may have to replace the disc.Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
Thanks all. I'll try leaving overnight tonight. If no joy, then I'll borrow another drive.Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
See:
Q. My CD drive is ripping very slowly? A. Try ripping to Test Conversion (set to no speed limit), this rules out a slow encoder, an average CD drive might start at x10 and get to x25 for the last CD track (the x speed can be seen on the tool bar whilst ripping). If the speed is obviously slow, around x2 and your computer seemsComment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
So, I set the options to 'never abort' and left the CD a few hours today. I just looked at it again and the three tracks it got through in 5 hours have insecure rip errors against them.
There are no holes in the disc, it's pretty new, and the controller is SATA (i.e. with no DMA/PIO option).
Any ideas before I borrow/buy another drive?Comment
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Re: Some rips are very slow (0.2x)
So, I set the options to 'never abort' and left the CD a few hours today. I just looked at it again and the three tracks it got through in 5 hours have insecure rip errors against them.
There are no holes in the disc, it's pretty new, and the controller is SATA (i.e. with no DMA/PIO option).
Any ideas before I borrow/buy another drive?Comment
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