RE: Ripping Level Question (help?)
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
The flac compression levels are 0 to 8 and uncompressed. The level has no bearing on audio quality whatsoever.
So, a flac, when decoded, will be identical whatever level you choose to encode it to.Comment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Which works fine except for releases with works by more then one composer. Classical can be difficult.
I haven't ripped any of my classical CDs yet, but when I do I'll be using an alternate naming string (as yet undetermined) and putting the files in a separate Classical library.Comment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Thanks mville,
Why, please, does 'dBpa' state that level '5' is most "recommended"?
Cheers,
PaulComment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Hi again,
I found this tutorial on You Tube which looks quite good for a novice (like myself):
See what you think.
PaulComment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
As a rough guide, I ripped 3 CDs tonight. Two rock CDs by the same artist, and one country. I changed one Genre tag from Pop/Rock to Rock, changed one Year, and used Capitalize All on the discs. All three gave an AccurateRip in a total time of around 20 minutes.Thanks Jailhouse,
I really don't mind about waiting for a CD to rip. If it takes ten minutes or an hour, that's fine. I don't want the PC to rush the process because that would defeat the object of maintaining accuracy!
I plan the rip (sing level '5') at the rate of 1 x CD per day. I should be able to have completed my entire CD collection in 12 x months.
Thanks,
Paul
If this had been a Classical CD, one would probably have taken the same time: mostly deciding how I want to tag it.Comment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Level 5 is a very good compromise between speed and the compressed file size. As all have said, when played, this makes absolutely no difference to the "quality" of the file. My colleagues, friends and myself, have stuck, to the default, Level 5, setting.Comment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Cheers,
I am following suit!
PaulComment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
No, Just The First Letter Of All The Words. Bad English, but some albums use it anyway. The good part about using it, is that it is consistent, helps reduce errors, and only takes one press. Most other options, are probably worse English, again, it's a personal preference.
Try it on one CD, and see if you like how it looks.Last edited by Oggy; July 28, 2017, 07:29 PM.Comment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Cheers Oggy,
But can this be done AFTER a CD has been ripped, please? I mean, if I tried and liked, then would I have to re-rip the CDs again I have done already?
PaulComment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Hi again,
(Please see screenshot.)
1 - Is the 'CRC' alpha-numeric code related to the check-sum, or is this completely different?
2 - Are the numbers (69~70) after 'accurate' related to how many online results (found) AccurateRip has cross-referenced the (my) rip against?
3 - Do you fill in anything in the 'Comment' field (I have left this verbatim empty).
4 - If the ORIGINAL (LP) recording session was 1968, and the date showing for the (remastered) CD version is (in this case) '2002', then do you change this date back to that of the original recording (ie. 1968)?
Many thanks in advance for any kind assistance offered here.
PaulComment
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Re: Ripping Level Question (help?)
Yes, I believe this can be done with the ID Tag Processing DSP.Comment

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