Ok, I don't know if this is me, the settings in dBpoweramp, or something else.
I am in the middle of changing my home music wireless system from an Apple iMac/iTunes based system streaming to a load of Sonos gear via a USB hard drive to a NAS based system instead.
After much research I decided that FLAC was the best option for my NAS drive (QNAP TS251 with Qfinder pro software).
After more research I was informed that dBpoweramp was the way to go for ripping CDs onto my NAS in FLAC file format. However, I'm finding that dBpoweramp is only accepting and successfully ripping about 8 out of every 10 CDs I throw at it. I never had any issues with iTunes importing in Apple Lossless and it is the same CDs that I'm trying to rip to dBpoweramp. I ripped over 1000 CDs into iTunes, without a single hiccup, yet I have only managed to import 100 CDs into dBpoweramp and I'm looking at a pile of 19 CDs that it failed to import due to accuracy errors and the like.
For the record, all my CDs are brand new without even a fingerprint on them, I'm fastidious, so there will be zero errors on any of them. Even classical CDs from Deutsche Grammophonare not being accepted.
I took some of the CDs that dBpoweramp failed to rip and ripped them perfectly ok in iTunes so I have to assume that there is a setting or two in dBpoweramp that I'm missing. Thing is, iTunes is really intuitive and easy to use and set up, dBpoweramp on the other hand is hard to fathom and not self explanatory. But, I do have the ripping mode set to 'Blast' and even then, it is struggling with a lot of my 'brand new' CDs.
Does anybody have any screen grabs of the various Preference settings and other settings in dBpoweramp that are known to work for standard CD ripping to FLAC files as I'm pulling my hair out every time it spits a CD out after not importing it, or only importing a few tracks from it. With over a thousand CDs to import I don't want this stress every 6 or 7 discs.
I can't find any simple-to-follow instructions on how to set up dBpoweramp anywhere. If iTunes imported as FLAC files I would not have any of these issues.
I'm only glad I didn't pay for dBpoweramp and am still on the trail period with it.
I am in the middle of changing my home music wireless system from an Apple iMac/iTunes based system streaming to a load of Sonos gear via a USB hard drive to a NAS based system instead.
After much research I decided that FLAC was the best option for my NAS drive (QNAP TS251 with Qfinder pro software).
After more research I was informed that dBpoweramp was the way to go for ripping CDs onto my NAS in FLAC file format. However, I'm finding that dBpoweramp is only accepting and successfully ripping about 8 out of every 10 CDs I throw at it. I never had any issues with iTunes importing in Apple Lossless and it is the same CDs that I'm trying to rip to dBpoweramp. I ripped over 1000 CDs into iTunes, without a single hiccup, yet I have only managed to import 100 CDs into dBpoweramp and I'm looking at a pile of 19 CDs that it failed to import due to accuracy errors and the like.
For the record, all my CDs are brand new without even a fingerprint on them, I'm fastidious, so there will be zero errors on any of them. Even classical CDs from Deutsche Grammophonare not being accepted.
I took some of the CDs that dBpoweramp failed to rip and ripped them perfectly ok in iTunes so I have to assume that there is a setting or two in dBpoweramp that I'm missing. Thing is, iTunes is really intuitive and easy to use and set up, dBpoweramp on the other hand is hard to fathom and not self explanatory. But, I do have the ripping mode set to 'Blast' and even then, it is struggling with a lot of my 'brand new' CDs.
Does anybody have any screen grabs of the various Preference settings and other settings in dBpoweramp that are known to work for standard CD ripping to FLAC files as I'm pulling my hair out every time it spits a CD out after not importing it, or only importing a few tracks from it. With over a thousand CDs to import I don't want this stress every 6 or 7 discs.
I can't find any simple-to-follow instructions on how to set up dBpoweramp anywhere. If iTunes imported as FLAC files I would not have any of these issues.
I'm only glad I didn't pay for dBpoweramp and am still on the trail period with it.
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