So, this is post is more about technical insight to the problem than anything else. Using Burst mode gets perfectly fine results for what I'm doing, but I am intensely curious to know what this is all about.
I am on my 5th attempt to archive my collection (several long stories at this point). I'm currently ripping some Depeche Mode CDs that were reissued in 1991. Matrix/runout codes for the first two are "1 40291-2 SRC**03 M1S2" and "1 40292-2 SRC**03 M1S1", respectively — just in case that helps. My Asus SDRW-08U9M-U has issues with them even in burst mode, but consistently would mark the 2nd track in both CDs as insecure and inaccurate. Ripping the 2nd tracks as a defective disc would resolve the issue; I no longer remember if Burst mode for these tracks errored out or not. It's acted up a few times since I bought it; so I opted to replace it with a Mercury Pro by OWC (in dBpoweramp, it identifies itself as "HL-DT-ST -BD-RE BH16NS40"). Initially, CD Ripper (current version) wouldn't allow to test for new offset with the new drive, specifically when using one of these two aforementioned CDs; I had to use an unrelated CD from 1990 to get it to register the correct +6. Both before and after I solved this, however, the new drive would rip in Secure (Recover Errors) mode with square wave style dropouts. Seriously, it sounded like some kid wanted to become a trance DJ and dropped a double-timed gate effect on the whole song. Switching to Burst mode, however, everything with these odd discs goes fine. They have precious few light scratches on them, and they'll play in real-time with zero issues.
I'm fairly certain that it's a problem specific with these reissues, and therefore assume it's just some funky DRM; but I definitely don't know for sure. It's all just very curious, and I'm wondering if anyone has any insight as to what's going on here. Similarly, I have two completely different CDs that rip as if they had a low-pass filter applied to them, but play in full frequency range. I have failed to learn anything concrete about any of this via the internet, but also don't really have a good sense of what to include in my search strings.
To reiterate, I'm not in a real problem spot, here. But, I love learning the technicals behind this kind of stuff. So, yeah. If anyone has technical insight on this matter, I'd love to hear about it.
I am on my 5th attempt to archive my collection (several long stories at this point). I'm currently ripping some Depeche Mode CDs that were reissued in 1991. Matrix/runout codes for the first two are "1 40291-2 SRC**03 M1S2" and "1 40292-2 SRC**03 M1S1", respectively — just in case that helps. My Asus SDRW-08U9M-U has issues with them even in burst mode, but consistently would mark the 2nd track in both CDs as insecure and inaccurate. Ripping the 2nd tracks as a defective disc would resolve the issue; I no longer remember if Burst mode for these tracks errored out or not. It's acted up a few times since I bought it; so I opted to replace it with a Mercury Pro by OWC (in dBpoweramp, it identifies itself as "HL-DT-ST -BD-RE BH16NS40"). Initially, CD Ripper (current version) wouldn't allow to test for new offset with the new drive, specifically when using one of these two aforementioned CDs; I had to use an unrelated CD from 1990 to get it to register the correct +6. Both before and after I solved this, however, the new drive would rip in Secure (Recover Errors) mode with square wave style dropouts. Seriously, it sounded like some kid wanted to become a trance DJ and dropped a double-timed gate effect on the whole song. Switching to Burst mode, however, everything with these odd discs goes fine. They have precious few light scratches on them, and they'll play in real-time with zero issues.
I'm fairly certain that it's a problem specific with these reissues, and therefore assume it's just some funky DRM; but I definitely don't know for sure. It's all just very curious, and I'm wondering if anyone has any insight as to what's going on here. Similarly, I have two completely different CDs that rip as if they had a low-pass filter applied to them, but play in full frequency range. I have failed to learn anything concrete about any of this via the internet, but also don't really have a good sense of what to include in my search strings.
To reiterate, I'm not in a real problem spot, here. But, I love learning the technicals behind this kind of stuff. So, yeah. If anyone has technical insight on this matter, I'd love to hear about it.
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