Somehow, I don't think the offsets stored in AccurateRip match up with the drive in my Nimbie autoloader. It rejects literally every disc I insert. How can I force AccurateRip to retest the offsets?
How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
Drive offsets would not cause the batch ripper to reject any discs. What is the reason given for the reject? -
Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I tested hundreds of different discs during the first two frustrating weeks, in order to get a statistically significant sample size showing a 100% reject rate with zero outliers. Then, while searching online for a possible solution, I saw a list of designated key discs for AccurateRip, so I picked 4 discs from my collection which were on that list. I have been using those four discs exclusively to test for the past couple weeks.
Special Notes:
Keep in mind that I can play the recordings on these audio CDs directly using the same Nimbie drive with zero audible glitches/stutters/artifacts in the music. I can also rip the CDs using the Nimbie as long as I use other software than dbPoweramp. The dbPoweramp applications are the only ones which won't rip these discs. Every program I've tried with the Nimbie reports that it successfully ripped these test discs with zero errors. Unfortunately, the other programs don't support AccurateRip, so I cannot actually verify whether truly "zero error" files are being produced by those rippers. The resulting FLAC files definitely sound good, but whether the rips are actually bit-perfect is unknown. Lastly, I get exactly the same errors using two different Nimbie machines. Acronova sent me a second machine to test in order to help me solve this issue. Because some valuable information is lost after the music CD has been ripped, I really want AccurateRip running during the rip stage. I don't want to rip with a different program, then run AccurateRip on the resulting FLAC file structure later. I just want to be able to use the dbPoweramp reference software I purchased.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
Oops! I forgot the third error message I've been getting. "Not Audio CD." That's also false because I only buy plain audio CDs. No apps. No PC-only special features. Just music CDs.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
Which security software are you using?
Have you only got 1 cd drive? or 2 drives? (one the nimbie and built in drive)Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I have both a DVD writer and a Blu-ray writer installed internally on my desktop machine. Both can read and rip music without any trouble. So, including the external Nimbie, I normally have had a total of 3 optical drives connected during my testing. The Nimbie has a Pioneer BDR-209M Blu-ray writer inside it. The Nimbie is attached to a USB 3.0 port. It's Acronova's latest USB 3.0 version of the device. (I wonder if everyone who is having trouble with their Nimbie is using the same new USB 3 version.) I've tried using a USB 2 cable connected to a USB 2 port on the Nimbie and it didn't make any difference. Yesterday, I plugged in the second Nimbie on loan from Acronova.. So, I have a total of four optical drives connected at this particular moment, but my weeks of testing has been done with only 3. Both Nimbies show up perfectly in Windows. Both can rip when using other software. Both reject every disc when using dbPoweramp Batch Ripper. Both are recognized and configured by "Batch Ripper - Configuration" as "Nimbie." Both are able to run at the same time. Neither is able to successfully rip a disc.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
As a test, disconnect the internal drives please.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I already tried to post a response once, but it never showed up. So, I'm trying again.
This morning, I disconnected all optical drives except one Nimbie machine. I ran the 4 CDs I'm testing through Batch Ripper on the Nimbie after configuring. All 4 were rejected. The error message was, "Ripping Error" on all 4. At least the error message is consistent now.
What should I try next?
-Bill
Debug/Notes From Rip
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dBpoweramp Batch Ripper
Batch Name:
Batch ID: 50009
Using Profile: Profile From 8-21-2017
Batch Rip Started: 9/2/2017 09:39:34
[PID: 16588] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Pre-Batch\Pre-Batch.exe" --drive="N" --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB6A8B. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB6A8C.tmp"
[PID: 16588] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
[PID: 1668] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Load\L oad.exe" --drive="N" --rejectifnodisc --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB70B7. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB70B8.tmp"
[PID: 1668] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
[PID: 9684] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Reject \Reject.exe" --drive="N" --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB83DF. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB83E0.tmp"
[PID: 9684] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
Disc 1: Madonna - Ray Of Light Reject 1: Ripping Error
Error ripping to , 'All Tracks' to 'All Tracks'
Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
[PID: 10816] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Load\L oad.exe" --drive="N" --rejectifnodisc --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBBCDFB. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BBCDFC.tmp"
[PID: 10816] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
[PID: 12764] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Reject \Reject.exe" --drive="N" --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB34A7. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB34A8.tmp"
[PID: 12764] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
Disc 2: Bob Marley & The Wailers - Legend (The Best Of Bob Marley And The Wailers) Reject 2: Ripping Error
Error ripping to , 'All Tracks' to 'All Tracks'
Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
[PID: 15444] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Load\L oad.exe" --drive="N" --rejectifnodisc --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB7F8E. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB7F8F.tmp"
[PID: 15444] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
[PID: 16048] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Reject \Reject.exe" --drive="N" --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBBE946. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BBE957.tmp"
[PID: 16048] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
Disc 3: No Doubt - Tragic Kingdom Reject 3: Ripping Error
Error ripping to , 'All Tracks' to 'All Tracks'
Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
[PID: 6176] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Load\L oad.exe" --drive="N" --rejectifnodisc --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB33EF. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB33F0.tmp"
[PID: 6176] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
[PID: 15492] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Reject \Reject.exe" --drive="N" --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBBDF8A. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BBDF8B.tmp"
[PID: 15492] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
Disc 4: Seal - Seal Reject 4: Ripping Error
Error ripping to , 'All Tracks' to 'All Tracks'
Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
[PID: 16460] Running Loader: "C:\Program Files\dBpoweramp\BatchRipper\Loaders\Nimbie\Load\L oad.exe" --drive="N" --rejectifnodisc --logfile="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\dBB4414. tmp" --passerrorsback="C:\Users\bill\AppData\Local\Temp\d BB4415.tmp"
[PID: 16460] Init Nimbie: Connecting to Nimbie: Close Nimbie: Closed
Batch Ended: 9/2/2017 09:47:14
Ripped: 0 Discs
Rejected: 4 DiscsComment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
>Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
This is an error indicative that the drive in the Nimbie is not working correctly with your computer. It could be the drive, it could be the chipset you have, it is hard to tell. CD Ripper is actively used on 100,000's of computers and we rarely come across this error.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
>Unable to Read CD Disc, is Audio CD?
This is an error indicative that the drive in the Nimbie is not working correctly with your computer. It could be the drive, it could be the chipset you have, it is hard to tell. CD Ripper is actively used on 100,000's of computers and we rarely come across this error.
I'm sincerely not trying to offend you. But before you discount my conclusions completely, I feel I should give you a bit of background information about me. I have a BS in Computer Science and a Masters in Project Management. I spent most of my life writing and debugging code before I retired. I've programmed in at least two dozen different computer languages on a fairly wide variety of CPUs & OSes. This included writing a fair amount of hand crafted assembly code for the PC. I wrote my first computer code in high school (before the PC or Apple || were available ~1976-1977) by manually entering machine code using a hexadecimal keypad on a refrigerator sized computer with only 4k of RAM. The last half of my career was spent working as a PC game programmer at a number of different small game development companies. I worked on sub-contracted games for Activision, Electronic Arts, Viacom, DC True, and others. On my very first Windows project, one of the things I wrote was triple buffered code running in a tiny sliver of RAM for Windows XP which continuously played Redbook audio CD tracks in the background of arcade style "twitch" games running at 200+fps using Win32. The CD audio code was unique because it ran without the usual (at the time) annoying display freezes caused by the optical drive seeking to a new track. My code was still being reused over and over in a number of other games even after I retired. I received occasional thank you emails from other developers for years. My point is I have extensive experience using deductive reasoning to narrow down the possible causes of code misbehavior. So, unless dbPoweramp is doing something particularly tricky/risky, like directly manipulating the hardware of the optical drive, rather than using the abstraction layer provided by the standard Windows optical drive interface, my experience tells me that the dbPoweramp code should behave similarly to any other program which is correctly using the same Windows interface. Unfortunately, this isn't the case because everything else I've tried works perfectly and only dbPoweramp's ripper doesn't work.
Like I said before, I'm not trying to create conflict, because I understand the complexity of modern software, and frankly your ripping software is far more capable than anything else I've seen. In order to avoid creating conflict, it is generally my habit when I contact tech support, to act and respond like a run-of-the-mill customer who wasn't a lifetime professional coder. I'm not trying to be sneaky or anything. I do it so I don't bias or otherwise alter the normal tech support responses to questions. I do it because I fully realize that there is ALWAYS the possibility I've overlooked something important in my troubleshooting efforts. I prefer getting unedited tech support responses because they have provided me with additional avenues for troubleshooting in more than a few cases. I'm only telling you my background now to point out that I have spent weeks trying things most people wouldn't even know to try before I came here looking for answers/suggestions. I also wanted you to know that my troubleshooting efforts have been based on an above average understanding of the coded mechanisms running behind the scenes. In other words, I'm just trying to help isolate the problem logically (and hopefullly without pissing anyone off) so we can solve it quicker.
Toward that end, do you have any other suggestions or additional tests I could try which would help narrow down the exact cause? I haven't found any other ripper that combines AccurateRip file verification with the highly complex conditional path creation your software supports. So, unlike most users I am fairly motivated to help get this working, rather than simply requesting a refund because it doesn't work.
Let me know what to do.
Thanks for all the help.
-BillComment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
Today, I plan to switch to a different computer to try to get this to work. If there is some strange incompatibility caused by my particular motherboard, BIOS, CPU, chipset, memory, or other hardware device, switching to a completely different computer should make a difference. I actually have 3 other computers, which a very rarely use for anything other than hosting network functions. I'll keep trying different computers until I find one that works. Then, I'll compare that combination of components to my primary desktop in order to try to narrow it down to a few probable culprits. I'll post an update if I gain any useful insight.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I spent a good part of my weekend trying to get both Nimbies to work with several other PCs. One of them never worked with any PC I tried, so something is obviously very wrong with that unit. I was actually able to get the other Nimbie to successfully rip between 1 and 3 tracks each on most of the 50 test CDs. Unfortunately, every disc was eventually still rejected due to the massive number of errors on all of the other tracks on each disc. Most of the test CDs had no visible smudges, scratches, or flaws on them. They also worked fine on my internal drives, so perhaps the optics are simply dirty on the Nimbie that sometimes rips a track successfully. Today, I plan to figure out a way to clean the laser lens on the Nimbie that sometimes,worked. It won't be easy because there are warranty-void seals preventing me from simply opening the machine up. At least I'm making a little progress toward figuring this out. Still not ready to give up completely. Wish me luck.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I tried to figure out a way to clean the laser lens, but just couldn't get to it. I did try one of those "optical drive cleaning discs," but it didn't help. I think it may be time to finally give up.Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
I finally got Batch Ripper to rip CDs as "secure," but AccurateRip still doesn't work. When the ripping process starts, it pops up a dialog telling me it can configure Accurate Rip using the CD currently in the drive. I click to tell it to configure. Then, it pops up an error. (image attached below, I hope)
The message reads, "This Key Disc cannot be used for offset detection it does not match the AccurateRip stored disc, or your drive does not exist in AccurateRip and this disc has multiple pressings stored. Please try a different Key Disc."
It pops up this same message for each disc in the stack of about 50 popular discs I'm currently using to test. Most, if not all of these discs are definitely in their database, so something else must be causing AccurateRip to abort configuration. Any suggestions?
FYI - The problem that caused Batch Ripper to reject every disc for the past couple months of trying was caused by the install & uninstall processes being incomplete and flawed. (They were leaving stuff behind that should have been removed and then not rewriting the correct version of the files on the next install.) There was also a conflict between the dbPoweramp install routines from the Nimbie software disc, and your install routines for the current version. Both of these things combined to create a perpetually corrupt dbPoweramp installation containing a mix of old and new files, no matter how many times I uninstalled and re-installed. To fix it, I did an uninstall, then I searched every process on my system to track down and manually remove a variety of files left behind by the uninstall. Once I was pretty sure I had deleted all of orphaned code left behind by dbPoweramp, Nimbie, and Broadex, I did a fresh install of the Nimbie driver only (none of their other software) followed by a clean install of the latest version of your software. That's when Batch Ripper stopped rejecting every CD and started ripping like all of the other programs I had tried. Accurate Rip is the only thing which still doesn't work, which unfortunately was the entire reason I bought dbPoweramp and a Nimbie robot. So, I'm still not finished trying to figure this out, but at least Batch Ripper doesn't reject CDs now.
What can I do to get Accurate Rip to work on this Pioneer Blu-ray drive?
Does this error mean the drive needs to be added to the AccurateRip drive offsets database?
Is there any way to do that? Who do I talk to?
-Bill (The Stubborn)Comment
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Re: How can I force AccurateRip to retest key discs and set new offset information?
Have a look at this list: [SIZE=2]AccurateRip[/SIZE] Key Discs. Hopefully you can feed it one of these and it will configure.Comment
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