I am just starting to load my CD's, and have always thought that WAV was the best alternative. However I have also seen suggestions that FLAC is a better format for archiving and playing. Interested in hearing viewpoints. Thanks, Bill
WAV vs Flac
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Re: WAV vs Flac
you might find this useful:
Last edited by garym; October 08, 2012, 06:46 PM. -
Re: WAV vs Flac
A wav file:
-Doesn't offer itself any method to detect corruption. FLAC/WAVPACK/APE formats can store a hash of audio stream to verify the integrity of content stored.
-Doesn't offer any standarized way of tagging.
-It is bigger, storing the same information which you could compress losslessly into FLAC/WAVPACK/APE.
My personal choice of lossless codec currently is wavpack:
-The command line program can handle easily and natively raw PCM files. Very convenient for compressing my Saturn/PlayStation/Mega-CD images once splitted into data part and audio part without using sox to create a .wav file with header, as intermediate step, which can be handled by an audio compressor.
-hh mode compress a little more than FLAC 8 (nothing significative anyway, 3/4/5 MB on a typical album), and compression speed is good.Last edited by pablogm123; October 08, 2012, 08:06 PM.Comment
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Re: WAV vs Flac
good point. I'd forgotten to list that benefit. And for the OP, this is automatically done (it doesn't require any special setting when you rip your CDs).Comment
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Re: WAV vs Flac
As others have said, FLAC is more compact and supports tagging. Some players are said to give better sound quality when receiving WAV than FLAC. In that case, many of the better music library/streaming programs will transcode FLAC to WAV as they send it. That way, you can get the best of both worlds.Comment
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