Using dBpoweramp


When ripping CDs, what causes dBpoweramp to have to "re-rip" a track (at a snail's pace)? And what's the diff between a "secure" and an "insecure" re-ripped track? Is all this a function of the cd or the digital drive doing the ripping or both?
rockyboy
Tthere is a sound difference between compressed flac and uncompressed (to my ears on my rig). I switched last year to uncompressed and very happy with improvement. HD space so cheap, easy to do. I use WAV for hires downloads as those sound better (to me on my rig) than flac downloads.
I use the default as well with FLAC to minimize disk space without any data loss and works fine.

I started out using .wav ripped using windows media player and converted those files to flac recently mainly to enable use with both Squeezebox and PLex systems and for the tagging/metadata benefits. If there is any sonic difference, I have not taken notice and believe both to be more or less equivalent in terms of information content and overall accuracy. dbpoweramp is more explicit about verifying accurate rips or not though.
My experience with dbPowerAmp is that the default settings usually work quite well 95% of the time. I only alter them if I have a particularly difficult CD to copy. But that has happened only a very few times in the past 7 years...

-RW-
Mapman - CDs giving me problems are those I borrowed from local library that have seen a lot of play. I always clean with Optrix but it can only do so much.
Another question re: dBpoweramp. I rip in FLAC using "lossless level 5 (default)" setting. Has that been a mistake? Should I have been using highest level 8 or even the "uncompressed" setting? Sound quality using my Bryston BDA-1/BPA-1 combo is outstanding and I certainly don't want to re-rip my 900 CDs. What are your thoughts?
Another way to look at it is that CD defects have much less impact ripping with DBpoweramp compared to scratches or other defects on a vinyl LP. I've ripped thousands of CDs and can only cite one or two cases where the ripped files (often from CDs acquired used on the cheap) demonstrated audible defects upon playback. Not worth losing any sleep over.

If the CD is in such bad shape, and you gotta have absolute perfection, just buy a new copy in better condition.

If the prolonged re-rips are occurring regularly, on many CDs that appear to be in good shape even with no manufacturing defects, then it might be time for a new CD reader. As long as it is in good operating condition and of good quality capable of high speed reads, you are good to go. Most reputable CD readers used with any name brand home computer these days in good working order should fit the bill and need not cost a premium just for this application.
Rocky, if a track you really want for whatever reason (for me often to just have all tracks in a release) you can set the bypass in the options after and just rerip the bad tracks to get the best results possible without prolonged rereads/waiting. If defects/bad reads are not extreme, there is a good chance the results will still be mostly good and still quite possibly not clearly audible if not perfect.

I know not perfect rubs many audiophiles the wrong way, but on the grand scale of things the sonic compromises that result may well turn out to be quite trivial compared to many of the compromises in good sound audiophiles sweat about frequently.
Thanks Mapman. If there are a lot of frames for re-ripping, I just skip that track and go onto the next one as I have no patience.
It can be both but moStly imperfections in the CD that results in different results in multiple reads used to verify the data when there is no accuraterip data from prior rips by others available for reference. To get an accurate rip in that case, data is reread many times until similar results are produced more than once. That can take a long time depending on how many units on the CD are affected by imperfections. You can bypass the rereading that occurs and tell accurate rip to accept less perfect none validated data if desired in order to make things go faster, but there could be audible artifacts in the rip as a result.