|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
108.185.129.12
In Reply to: RE: I should know the answer to this. . . posted by 2-ears on April 16, 2021 at 16:45:33
There's a technical component to my question that I omitted. I assume that if WMP perfectly converts the 1's and 0's on the CD and doesn't add any random bits of information on its own (i.e., noise), the output file is as good as it gets. Right? The same can be said for any other conversion software.
Follow Ups:
By design a bit perfect copy is not guaranteed.
This is inherent to the CD audio standard (Redbook).At design time, they decided to maximize capacity at the expense of bit perfect reading.
An audio CD uses all 2352 bytes per block for sound samples.
A CD-ROM (bit perfect reading guaranteed) only 2048 bytes. The remainder is used for error correction code.
A 15% reduction in capacity compared with the audio CD.So most of the time the rip will be right as CD's are pretty reliable.
Occasionally is will be wrong and that is where dBpoweramp comes in.
Instead of interpolating will try to re-read troublesome sectors.As bit perfect reading is not guaranteed, that is where AccurateRip comes in. If your rip matches those of others, it is likely a correct rip.
The Well Tempered Computer
Edits: 04/17/21 04/17/21
That was helpful.
FAQ |
Post a Message! |
Forgot Password? |
|
||||||||||||||
|
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: