Years ago the common practice was to rip CD's at the slower speeds (2x 4x) for best accuracy. Is that unnecessary now with AccurateRip and the like? I have 2 disc drives for ripping. On my Buffalo Media Desktop Disc Writer I rip at 4x but on my HP PC Computer's Disc Drive 10x is the slowest speed shown. I got it to rip at slower speeds before but cannot remember the steps I had to take to achieve this. No such problems with the Buffalo Disc Writer as many speeds are accessible.
CD Ripper Speeds
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I would go with max, and let the drive decide automatically what speed to use. I set max, and the condition of the CD can greatly change the 'automatic' speed it uses.Comment
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I will go with max then. I found the Absolute Sound article that recommended slower speeds and it was 2011 so that was ancient history, lol.
Ripping HDCD encoded discs I use the DSP/HDCD application without the 6 db boost. I am assuming this to be the best practice? Any advice appreciated.
Thanks for all the help and really enjoying dBpoweramp.
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I rip my HDCD discs without the HDCD DSP (so I have a bit perfect digital copy, even if I want to modify an additional copy). And in cases where PE is actually a feature used in the HDCD CD I can create a separate copy converting the original files using the HDCD DSP (often HDCD features are not actually used. For example Grateful Dead releases of last 10 years, that are HDCD but don't use the Peak Extension feature, thus no reason to treat it like an HDCD). HDCD can be a complicated subject (particularly with all the "HDCD" disks that don't really use the features). See for example
I apologize in advance for this lengthy post and its wordy questions, but after a lot of reading I'm still unsure what the best general approach is for ripping HDCDs, and from what I can tell there is no FAQ or definitive best practices recommended by illustrate. This might be a bit pedantic, but I'm really hoping those of you
p.s. be very careful of what you believe from Absolute Sound. A number of years ago they had an article that tried to convince people that a WAV file created on Windows vs. Mac, or even different Windows operating systems *sounded* different, despite the fact that they readily admitted that the different WAV files were *bit perfect* copies of each other. This is trivial to show. So in other words, complete *audiophool* nonsense. Buyer beware.Comment
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A good post on HDCD from a very knowledgeable digital music person
Hello! I'm planning on ripping a bunch of cd's using dBpoweramp and I want to rip everything perfectly the first time. I was taking a look at all of the DSP effects but now I'm left with a few questions. 1. What is the difference between the Hidden Track Silence Removal and the Silence Track Deletion DSPs? I get what theyComment
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I rip my HDCD discs without the HDCD DSP (so I have a bit perfect digital copy, even if I want to modify an additional copy). And in cases where PE is actually a feature used in the HDCD CD I can create a separate copy converting the original files using the HDCD DSP (often HDCD features are not actually used. For example Grateful Dead releases of last 10 years, that are HDCD but don't use the Peak Extension feature, thus no reason to treat it like an HDCD). HDCD can be a complicated subject (particularly with all the "HDCD" disks that don't really use the features). See for example
I apologize in advance for this lengthy post and its wordy questions, but after a lot of reading I'm still unsure what the best general approach is for ripping HDCDs, and from what I can tell there is no FAQ or definitive best practices recommended by illustrate. This might be a bit pedantic, but I'm really hoping those of you
p.s. be very careful of what you believe from Absolute Sound. A number of years ago they had an article that tried to convince people that a WAV file created on Windows vs. Mac, or even different Windows operating systems *sounded* different, despite the fact that they readily admitted that the different WAV files were *bit perfect* copies of each other. This is trivial to show. So in other words, complete *audiophool* nonsense. Buyer beware.Comment
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A good post on HDCD from a very knowledgeable digital music person
https://forum.dbpoweramp.com/forum/d...882#post187882Comment
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