To get a few inevitable questions out of the way:
Ripped using DBPoweramp- Secure (Recover Errors) > Drive Speed MAX > Ultra Secure 2/4/2 > Re-Reads 34, Speed MAX > Drive Read Cache 1024KB- AccurateRip > Query Rupping Results > Cross Pressing Verification- CD ROM > MAX Speed > Offset +6 > Apply De-emphasis
Flac 5, but also tested uncompressed.
Using zero DSP's currently, though the issue was also present when testing ReplayGain (NOT RG-Apply) both in FLAC and ALAC with a mix of album/track settings (advanced settings on default, EBRU, -18, disable clip prevention UNCHECKED)
Tested on Airpod Pro 2's and Q3030i's)
I have played the music back using VLC (Windows 10), iTunes, Apple Music app on iPhone 15 Pro Max (no EQ or soundcheck settings enabled)
100% of the affected files have AccurateRip confidence ranging from 4 to 200.
I have been cross referencing with Spotify and Tidal, quality maxed out with no EQ or soundcheck/normalization settings.
I have also tested a few of the CD's on two different read/writers. The issue persists on playback from disc as well as in the file.
I noticed some obvious crackling and even clipping on a few tracks while shuffling last week, and immediately checked all my playback settings. Everything looked good, so I decided to cross reference with Spotify to see if the streaming track had the same artifacts. None of them did. This spiraled me down a rabbit hole checking random songs on both my PC and iPhone and comparing them to streaming and Youtube versions, and the bottom line is that many of my tracks have the same issue, and all of them are inferior to the versions on streaming services. Obviously concerning, but distressing for me as I just spent weeks ripping 500+ CD's. The internet swears that if AccurateRip is confident, there's no chance my data isn't bit-perfect. The internet swears my CPU (i12900k) isn't the problem. The internet swears my $40 LG CD writer isn't the problem. But there is obviously a problem, and I'm confident enough to say it isn't my playback hardware, as it exists across completely unrelated setups and isn't present on other supposedly identical versions of the tracks.
The best I can figure is some of my 10+ year old cd's have degradation or damage of some kind, introducing minor distortion or clipping artifacts, but they are minor enough that the data checks out with AccurateRip. I guess the other option is that the files are such high quality that I'm hearing things not present in a more compressed version available on streaming services, but that seems...improbable, considering how much worse they are to my ear.
I'm at a loss here.
Ripped using DBPoweramp- Secure (Recover Errors) > Drive Speed MAX > Ultra Secure 2/4/2 > Re-Reads 34, Speed MAX > Drive Read Cache 1024KB- AccurateRip > Query Rupping Results > Cross Pressing Verification- CD ROM > MAX Speed > Offset +6 > Apply De-emphasis
Flac 5, but also tested uncompressed.
Using zero DSP's currently, though the issue was also present when testing ReplayGain (NOT RG-Apply) both in FLAC and ALAC with a mix of album/track settings (advanced settings on default, EBRU, -18, disable clip prevention UNCHECKED)
Tested on Airpod Pro 2's and Q3030i's)
I have played the music back using VLC (Windows 10), iTunes, Apple Music app on iPhone 15 Pro Max (no EQ or soundcheck settings enabled)
100% of the affected files have AccurateRip confidence ranging from 4 to 200.
I have been cross referencing with Spotify and Tidal, quality maxed out with no EQ or soundcheck/normalization settings.
I have also tested a few of the CD's on two different read/writers. The issue persists on playback from disc as well as in the file.
I noticed some obvious crackling and even clipping on a few tracks while shuffling last week, and immediately checked all my playback settings. Everything looked good, so I decided to cross reference with Spotify to see if the streaming track had the same artifacts. None of them did. This spiraled me down a rabbit hole checking random songs on both my PC and iPhone and comparing them to streaming and Youtube versions, and the bottom line is that many of my tracks have the same issue, and all of them are inferior to the versions on streaming services. Obviously concerning, but distressing for me as I just spent weeks ripping 500+ CD's. The internet swears that if AccurateRip is confident, there's no chance my data isn't bit-perfect. The internet swears my CPU (i12900k) isn't the problem. The internet swears my $40 LG CD writer isn't the problem. But there is obviously a problem, and I'm confident enough to say it isn't my playback hardware, as it exists across completely unrelated setups and isn't present on other supposedly identical versions of the tracks.
The best I can figure is some of my 10+ year old cd's have degradation or damage of some kind, introducing minor distortion or clipping artifacts, but they are minor enough that the data checks out with AccurateRip. I guess the other option is that the files are such high quality that I'm hearing things not present in a more compressed version available on streaming services, but that seems...improbable, considering how much worse they are to my ear.
I'm at a loss here.
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