Original thread hyah: http://www.taperssection.com/index.php?board=1;action=display;threadid=9354Bill posted:I have to admit some fault. I thought that I was good to go using EAC to get bit perfect extractions and that all was good. Then I read this:
http://www.sharingthegroove.org/msgboard/showthread.php?s=39f6347ca65235e96fd71eb1b1d7479d&threadid=18429So fortunately...I don't trade much. I don't know how much of an effect my original settings had on the EAC's I did in the past. I'm still not 100% that I do have it set now. I read, and re-read the instructions found:
here:
http://pages.cthome.net/homepage/eac/setup.htm2004-07-03 | Edited by Brian Skalinderand here: http://www.ping.be/satcp/eacoffsets02.htm#-Out-dated link. New one:
The Coaster FactoryI set the read offset to 0, ripped a studio disk, burned that disk, ripped tracks off of the second disk, and compared the WAV files using the feature in EAC. At first I came up with 92 missing samples on the original rip. I adjusted my read offset to +92.
Then I re-ripped the second disk and compared the WAV files again. This time I got no errors.
SO...am I good now?
npsinboro replied:That's exactly what yer supposed to do Bill.
For further sanity checks you could do a file compare in DOS between the two .wav's you extracted from different disks to ensure the files are identical (not sure what EAC uses).
If in windows > Start > Run > 'cmd'
In DOS window:
C:\> FC filename1 filename2
Similar format to the unix "diff" command.