I am looking for a work flow that will allow me to efficiently rip approximately 1200 CDs to FLAC, tag them, and perhaps encode them to mp3 after they have ALL been ripped to FLAC.
1. I would like to rip securely (should I rip "ultra" securely)?
2. First of all, how can I be absolutely certain that I got a proper, error free rip?
3. Also, kindly include a way to deal with CD rips that contain errors. Did I read in the forums that someone had a spreadsheet that kept up with this?
4. What tools are recommended for cleaning the discs?
5. What tools are recommended for dealing with scratched discs - should I try to rip on a drive that deals well with scratches or try to repair the scratches first?
Please include recommended dbpoweramp setting for CD Ripper and Batch Ripper.
I will be building 2 dedicated 1.1 GHz machines that will have 2-4 optical drives each.
I will be using the following optical drives:
Plextor PX-230A
Plextor PX-708a
Lite-On SHM-165H6S
I am leaning towards using multiple instances of CD Ripper, though I will also experiment with Batch Ripper to see which one is easier to use.
Best regards,
computer-girl
1. I would like to rip securely (should I rip "ultra" securely)?
2. First of all, how can I be absolutely certain that I got a proper, error free rip?
3. Also, kindly include a way to deal with CD rips that contain errors. Did I read in the forums that someone had a spreadsheet that kept up with this?
4. What tools are recommended for cleaning the discs?
5. What tools are recommended for dealing with scratched discs - should I try to rip on a drive that deals well with scratches or try to repair the scratches first?
Please include recommended dbpoweramp setting for CD Ripper and Batch Ripper.
I will be building 2 dedicated 1.1 GHz machines that will have 2-4 optical drives each.
I will be using the following optical drives:
Plextor PX-230A
Plextor PX-708a
Lite-On SHM-165H6S
I am leaning towards using multiple instances of CD Ripper, though I will also experiment with Batch Ripper to see which one is easier to use.
Best regards,
computer-girl
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