Hi all,I am new to this and looking for advice. I have been streaming music via FLAC for a couple of years using a mac computer and 4media Convertors to rip CDs to flac. I have got rid of the mac recently and replaced it with a PC. I have on trial the dbpoweramp convertor but I am finding that the quality is not as good as I had before ie sound not as smooth and a bit of hiss. I have set the controls as follows lossless levels 5. Ripping method secure. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Poor quality
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Re: Poor quality
Hi all,I am new to this and looking for advice. I have been streaming music via FLAC for a couple of years using a mac computer and 4media Convertors to rip CDs to flac. I have got rid of the mac recently and replaced it with a PC. I have on trial the dbpoweramp convertor but I am finding that the quality is not as good as I had before ie sound not as smooth and a bit of hiss. I have set the controls as follows lossless levels 5. Ripping method secure. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Do you play these files on other players (something other than your computer, eg a Sonos or Squeeezebox or uPnP player on a TV?). If so, you can compare on something else. -
Re: Poor quality
something is wrong with your playback chain. A bit perfect FLAC rip is what it is. Different FLAC rips don't sound "less smooth" or with a "bit of hiss". This would all come from the PLAYER not the ripper. These changes you've noticed certainly could come from a different player/soundcard. What has changed in that regard in your setup. Were you playing via the Mac before and now via the PC. These have different soundcards and possibly you're using different speakers. Soundcard and speakers can certainly change the sound of playback. Also, have you checked all your audio settings in the PC.
Do you play these files on other players (something other than your computer, eg a Sonos or Squeeezebox or uPnP player on a TV?). If so, you can compare on something else.Comment
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Re: Poor quality
edit: you might also try a blind test (at least single blind) to make sure you're not imagining things (it happens a lot to audio folks comparing new components!). For example, take some FLAC files you previously ripped, create some new FLAC version by ripping same CDs with dbpa. Load these in a playlist and let someone else select what to play and have you indicate which you think were the better FLAC versions. The person doing this will know which is which, but you won't. So at least it is a single blind test.Last edited by garym; December 07, 2014, 07:21 PM.Comment
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