In short yes...you can use the Flac frontend to reconvert to WAV.
ExactAudioCopy ripping software
Hi - I'm little confused
Who can recommend which of ExactAudioCopy programs to buy, in order to rip my 1500 CD collection.(bought a Sonos system with a 500 gig HD)
I want to extract the maximum information.
Been to their website, but they have too many products to choose from - please advise.
Plus once I have selected the right one - are their any recommendations regarding the process you might adise?
Thanks
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- 23 posts total
I've rip about a 100 cd's using the ExactAudioCopy utility and I rip them as uncompressed WAV files. I didn't want to compromise the music quality. However, having read this thread, I'm wondering if there's a way to convert my uncompressed WAV files to a encoded lossless format. If so, can someone advise on how and with what may be the best way; thanks. Gerald |
I've rip about a 100 cd's using the ExactAudioCopy utility and I rip them as uncompressed WAV files. I didn't want to compromise the music quality. However, having read this thread, I'm wondering if there's a way to convert my uncompressed WAV files to a encoded lossless format. Yes, use the flac front end. Load your wav files in it, many at a time if needed, pick a destination folder, then hit "encode". Flac front end available here flac front end You need the flac codec too Flac site |
I actually keep mine in Apple Lossless format, and get about 2:1 compression. I use a little thing called iTunesEncode, which calls iTunes from EAC to rip. I thought about FLAC, but I figured it was safer to use Apple Lossless in terms of Apple's dominance of the market. The other nice thing about using FLAC/ALAC to keep your tunes is that both formats support tagging. BTW, have y'all seen the new $2K slimdevice box? Looks sweet, although the price tag is ugly--word clock sync, AES/EBU digital outputs... |
- 23 posts total