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Uh-oh, my drive is [Purged]...

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  • ferrarabrainpan
    dBpoweramp Supporter
    • Jul 2018
    • 73

    #1

    Uh-oh, my drive is [Purged]...

    I just purchased a new Dell Windows 11 desktop PC. Looking in System Information or Device Manager, I find my CD-ROM drive is listed as:

    ATA HL-DT-ST DVD+/-RW GU90N

    which happens to be the same drive in my previous Dell desktop which I purchased in 2018, a drive with which I made ultra-secure and accurate rips of many thousands of CDs using CD Ripper. Now I go to this page and am disappointed and somewhat disturbed to read:

    "A small number of drives have [Purged] as the offset, these drives were found not to have a constant drive offset (perhaps different manufacturing batches, or firmwares), as such they have been removed from AccurateRip's drive database (should you have one of these drives, 3 matching key disks will be required to configure AccurateRip)."

    I scroll down and find that my drive is one listed as [Purged].

    Now what am I supposed to do? What are matching key disks and how do I go about getting three of them, and what do I do with them when I get them? I already started copying over the settings and naming profiles from CD Ripper on my old computer to my new computer, and as I am about to get down to the nitty gritty, I am stumped by this.

    Please help me out. I was bracing myself for the challenge of setting up CD Ripper but now it looks like it's going to be even more troublesome than I expected.

    I've attached a couple screenshots which are Greek to me but maybe Spoon or someone can make sense of the details...
    Attached Files
  • Spoon
    Administrator
    • Apr 2002
    • 45796

    #2
    It will be more difficult to configure, you might need to feed the drive some 50 discs, instead of 1.
    Spoon
    www.dbpoweramp.com

    Comment

    • ferrarabrainpan
      dBpoweramp Supporter
      • Jul 2018
      • 73

      #3
      Originally posted by Spoon
      It will be more difficult to configure, you might need to feed the drive some 50 discs, instead of 1.
      I still don't understand. 50 is a lot more than 3. Please explain, is there a link or tutorial telling me how to proceed?

      Or would I be better off buying a different drive and getting someone to install it? If so, where would I buy one and what one would I buy? When I ordered this PC from Dell and had them assemble the components I asked about the optical drive and was told I basically have no choice, they install whatever they have in the warehouse, I have no choice as to brand or model.

      FWIW, this appears to be the same drive I was using for those thousands of rips I made with my last PC, all presumable secure and accurate. Or at least CD Ripper logged them as such, and I never heard any audible glitches.

      Please give me some more information, I am pretty stupid about this stuff but I am serious about it.

      EDIT: is there a section or paragraph on this page that tells me what to do and how to do it, given my circumstances, please?
      Last edited by ferrarabrainpan; Today, 12:05 AM.

      Comment

      • garym
        dBpoweramp Supporter
        • Nov 2007
        • 6164

        #4
        Nothing really special to do. Just keep inserting reasonably popular CDs. Eventually it will setup accuraterip. Might take 2 or 3 CDs. Might take 25+. But it will eventually setup accuraterip.

        Comment

        • ferrarabrainpan
          dBpoweramp Supporter
          • Jul 2018
          • 73

          #5
          Originally posted by garym
          Nothing really special to do. Just keep inserting reasonably popular CDs. Eventually it will setup accuraterip. Might take 2 or 3 CDs. Might take 25+. But it will eventually setup accuraterip.
          I have some reasonably popular CDs. When it says "3 matching key disks" does "matching" mean multiple copies of the same CD?

          Perhaps I haven't read far enough in the setup guide to quite get what you mean. Thanks for your time and patience with my doubts and confusions...

          Comment

          • garym
            dBpoweramp Supporter
            • Nov 2007
            • 6164

            #6
            No. Matching key disks just means any known CDs. But it could take several. Not multiple copies of same disk. For example a Beatles CD, a Rolling Stones CD and a Who CD. That would be 3 key disks.

            Comment

            • Spoon
              Administrator
              • Apr 2002
              • 45796

              #7
              The discs cannot have different pressings
              so it means it will take more than 3 matching discs.
              Spoon
              www.dbpoweramp.com

              Comment

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