![]() ![]() Maybe you wanted to hear it that way? EDIT: And does that really prove that other is inferior when clicks sound louder? IMO, no. I came here with an objective test, looking for more evidence about my thesisĢ) Your test is not objective ("Both rippings had lots of clics, but in a normal listening those clics sounded louder in EAC's ripping than in Sound Forge's"). Quote from: dalton2 on 03:05:57 Many of your comments so far are subjective opinions, not facts. Two consecutive (and fast) rippings by Sound Forge proved to be different, and two consecutive (very very slow) rippings by EAC proved to be different, two.ĥ) Both rippings had lots of clics, but in a normal listening those clics sounded louder in EAC's ripping than in Sound Forge's (M-Audio Transit USB card, Sennheiser HD-650 headphones). I compared it with the ripping from the clean CD and they proved again to be identical.Ĥ) I ripped a very very scratched CD with mp3 transcoded into CD audio with both Sound Forge and EAC. I cut the differences of both waves, saved them again and compared one more time with Find Duplicates, and they proved to be identical.ģ) I ripped again Old and Wise with Sound Forge but this time with fingerprints on the CD. The differences were: 102 samples (0.002313 seconds) extra of data in Sound Forge's ripping at the beginning (thus missing in EAC's ripping), and 102 samples extra of data in EAC's ripping at the end. ![]() I compared the four files with the little application Find Duplicates (it compares files within a folder and tells you which ones are identical) and both rippings by Sound Forge are equal, and so do the ones by EAC.Ģ) I loaded one wave from Sound Forge and another one from EAC into Sound Forge and compared them visually with full zoom. I've been doing several tests with EAC and Sound Forge Pro 10.0 at ripping audio CD:ġ) I ripped Old and Wise (last track from Alan Parson's Eye in the Sky album (original recording)) to WAV from a clean and unscratched disc with Sound Forge and EAC (normal correction mode) twice each. ![]()
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