"It still seems to me that Bit-perfect ripping does provide the best case scenario for reliably getting the data off the optical disk as best as possible"
You would be correct, however as stated before here, errors and error correction is not the thing that makes CD playback an inferior method. Its the CD servo and its effect on jitter from the transport. If you have a transport that is CDROM-based and buffers the data at high-speed in memory, then this can be as good as a ripped file, assuming a good hardware design.
"THere is still lots that can go wrong downstream from there in regards to jitter in particular even with a practically bit perfect ripped .wav file. More so in general perhaps in the case of FLAC which is lossless but compressed and requires more processing in the D2A conversion process."
My theory is that its not jitter differences that makes FLAC sound different that .wav. Particularly with the advent of Async USB.
Its the real-time behavior of the FLAC CODEC when running on the computer. Seems to happen on both PC and Mac.
On the other hand, FLAC CODECs in end-point networked devices, such as Squeezebox have been demonstrated to sound identical to .wav.
Only people using a computer for FLAC decoding hear these differences.
Steve N.
Empirical Audio
You would be correct, however as stated before here, errors and error correction is not the thing that makes CD playback an inferior method. Its the CD servo and its effect on jitter from the transport. If you have a transport that is CDROM-based and buffers the data at high-speed in memory, then this can be as good as a ripped file, assuming a good hardware design.
"THere is still lots that can go wrong downstream from there in regards to jitter in particular even with a practically bit perfect ripped .wav file. More so in general perhaps in the case of FLAC which is lossless but compressed and requires more processing in the D2A conversion process."
My theory is that its not jitter differences that makes FLAC sound different that .wav. Particularly with the advent of Async USB.
Its the real-time behavior of the FLAC CODEC when running on the computer. Seems to happen on both PC and Mac.
On the other hand, FLAC CODECs in end-point networked devices, such as Squeezebox have been demonstrated to sound identical to .wav.
Only people using a computer for FLAC decoding hear these differences.
Steve N.
Empirical Audio