A.
Yesterday I started using dbpoweramp CD-ripper for the first time. I ripped something like 20 CD's. Ripping a CD took something like 3 or 4 minutes each. I thought it was a good idea to use that time to change some metadata and make a scan of the album art. I supposed that all my changes would be "saved on exit" (ejection of the CD).
But today I see (in Windows Explorer) that the changes I made to the metadata are not saved and with some CD's, but not all, the album art is missing. I searched in this forum in I found out that I can change the metadata and add the album art of all the individual tracks after ripping bij changing them 1 by 1, but of course I don't like to do it that way.
Question A 1
Was my idea wrong that I could change metadata and album art during or after ripping, as long as I did not eject the CD? Should I change metadata and scan the album art BEFORE ripping (and than just wait patiently during ripping)? Is there a way to save my changes after ripping and before ejection?
Question A 2
Today I checked the (FLAC-)files I made from a CD (where I changed metadata and album art after ripping) in Windows Explorer. In the files (ID-tag) I see the old title of the album (without my changes) and there is no folder.jpg in the map of that album (allthough I scanned the cover of the CD). The inidivdual files don't mention the folder.jpg in their ID-tag.
So I inserted the same CD running dbpoweramp CD Ripper with the idea I had to rerip everything to get the right metadata and album-art, but to my surprise in dbpoweramp CD ripper I see the changes I made and I see the album art that I scanned. So I suppose dbpoweramp has saved my changes somewhere else (and not in the FLAC-files) but I cannot find out where.
Where can I find these changed data and is there a way to transfer them to my FLAC-files without reripping?
B.
I have some CD's with a lot of problems during ripping (not "accurate" and "red (= wrong) CRC"). Sometimes these problems are solved after re-ripping, sometimes not.
Question B 1
Is there a way to "ask" the program to re-rip extra slow or with extra care, or is it just sheer luck if reripping will solve the problems?
Question B 2
Is there anything I can do to have a better result? Clean the CD's?
Yesterday I started using dbpoweramp CD-ripper for the first time. I ripped something like 20 CD's. Ripping a CD took something like 3 or 4 minutes each. I thought it was a good idea to use that time to change some metadata and make a scan of the album art. I supposed that all my changes would be "saved on exit" (ejection of the CD).
But today I see (in Windows Explorer) that the changes I made to the metadata are not saved and with some CD's, but not all, the album art is missing. I searched in this forum in I found out that I can change the metadata and add the album art of all the individual tracks after ripping bij changing them 1 by 1, but of course I don't like to do it that way.
Question A 1
Was my idea wrong that I could change metadata and album art during or after ripping, as long as I did not eject the CD? Should I change metadata and scan the album art BEFORE ripping (and than just wait patiently during ripping)? Is there a way to save my changes after ripping and before ejection?
Question A 2
Today I checked the (FLAC-)files I made from a CD (where I changed metadata and album art after ripping) in Windows Explorer. In the files (ID-tag) I see the old title of the album (without my changes) and there is no folder.jpg in the map of that album (allthough I scanned the cover of the CD). The inidivdual files don't mention the folder.jpg in their ID-tag.
So I inserted the same CD running dbpoweramp CD Ripper with the idea I had to rerip everything to get the right metadata and album-art, but to my surprise in dbpoweramp CD ripper I see the changes I made and I see the album art that I scanned. So I suppose dbpoweramp has saved my changes somewhere else (and not in the FLAC-files) but I cannot find out where.
Where can I find these changed data and is there a way to transfer them to my FLAC-files without reripping?
B.
I have some CD's with a lot of problems during ripping (not "accurate" and "red (= wrong) CRC"). Sometimes these problems are solved after re-ripping, sometimes not.
Question B 1
Is there a way to "ask" the program to re-rip extra slow or with extra care, or is it just sheer luck if reripping will solve the problems?
Question B 2
Is there anything I can do to have a better result? Clean the CD's?
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