06-01-14: AudioengrI agree completely, Steve. The experimental methodology he described in his first post in this thread (dated 5-22-14), the validity of which I disputed in my subsequent response, cannot distinguish between effects occurring during the ripping process and effects occurring during the playback process. Yet he attributes the differences he perceived to the ripping process, even though (as we've both explained) it is entirely expectable and technically explainable that differences will be introduced during playback, and entirely unexpectable and technically inexplicable that differences will be introduced during a properly implemented rip.
His assertion is that ripping CDs is a flawed process because he hears a difference when playing back the same track on a PC or Mac using first the CDROM as a transport and then with the ripped track playing back from hard disk.
The problem with this comparison is that it is NOT apples to apples. Because the playback hardware paths in the computer for CDROM and memory/disk playback are entirely different and they actually use two different clocks, I would expect these to sound very different. This has nothing to do with the rip quality.
Regards,
-- Al