Hi, I'm a long-time user of dbpoweramp/CD Ripper and although I rarely purchase CDs nowadays I do have around 850. These have been digitised differently as my thinking and budget provided. I started with 128kbps MP3, moved to 160kbps WMA and then WMA 9.2 lossless. My naming strategy has also eveolved over the years. I decided I'd re-rip everything in lossless format using consistent naming but I'm getting what I consider a high number of AccurateRip errors, around 1 in 10 CDs either fails or is Securely ripped, often multiple tracks. The disc surface is unmarked; most of these CDs were only taken out of the jewel case, ripped to disc and then put back away for storage. I know writeable CDs have a limited shelf life, but these are commercial pressed CDs. Do pressed discs also degrade over time? To be fair, many of these CDs were purchased in the 1990s. Thanks.
Older Audio CDs
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Re: Older Audio CDs
This shouldn&*8217;t happen by design for CD, but unfortunately some production facilities did have quality issues. You can search a phenomenon known as disc rot. It can happen in some cases, I have a few in my collection that are worse than others, among 900 or so CDs. But not likely to be 1/10 though. -
Re: Older Audio CDs
Hi, the errors are a mixture; I am getting some flagged as inaccurate but secure which I'm OK with, but also a number of Inaccurate/Insecure. And large numbers of frames to be reripped, such as 1200 or more. I thought initially the problem was with tracks at the outside edge of the CD, but now I see they are in different parts as well. Tried using the optical drive in my wife's desktop, but failures on same tracks. Thanks for your input on my issue.Comment
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Re: Older Audio CDs
Frame re-rips are likely a damaged disc, or degradation due to cd age (disc rot).Comment
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