View Full Version : What is the longest time EAC has taken to rip one of your CDs?
I am currently at just over 29 hours, and there is about another hour left. :eek:
I reckon it would have been cheaper to buy a new copy of the CD. :lol:
Something very very wrong there. Either EAC is encountering massive CRC errors on the disc or your setup is not configured correctly.
It normally takes me about 3 minutes to rip a CD and have it converted to FLAC.
I think that there is a problem with the disc, as it is a one off problem.
Everything else has worked fine.
Sherwood
28-08-2018, 20:02
I am currently at just over 29 hours, and there is about another hour left. :eek:
I reckon it would have been cheaper to buy a new copy of the CD. :lol:
I once tried to get an EAC rip of a much loved cd. Although there was no obvious damage to the cd it would not rip with dBPoweramp. I started a rip with EAC just before departing on a short trip. After 3 days it had still not managed an error free rip. There are some discs which just cannot be salvaged.
It might be worth trying again after a radical cd clean using slightly abrasive solutions (e.g. Brasso or toothpaste).
Geoff
Lawrence001
28-08-2018, 20:29
It used to take me 20-30 mins per disc so I gave up and bought a Zen :)
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Used it years ago. think the longest I even waited was an hr. I had another a bit like yours that looked like it was going to take a day the way it was going but i took it out and ripped it with foobar and it ripped in 4 mins. not sure what the issue was, but might have been I picked the wrong album version. that makes it all go haywire
Stratmangler
28-08-2018, 20:35
I am currently at just over 29 hours, and there is about another hour left. :eek:
I reckon it would have been cheaper to buy a new copy of the CD. :lol:
Which CD?
All about Eve - All about Eve. :sofa:
StanleyB
29-08-2018, 09:44
I am currently at just over 29 hours, and there is about another hour left. :eek:
I reckon it would have been cheaper to buy a new copy of the CD. :lol:
You might have a CD that has copy protection on it. The first Norah Jones CD is an example of a disc with a copy protection code.
Sherwood
29-08-2018, 10:40
You might have a CD that has copy protection on it. The first Norah Jones CD is an example of a disc with a copy protection code.
Many rippers have been upgraded to bypass the copy protection. Not sure about EAC.
Geoff
guyhayton
29-08-2018, 16:26
All About Eve is a copyrighted CD...they mess up the table of contents or something that gets ignored by redbook CD players but causes problems on computers. Well that's how it was explained to me. I had a few of these copyrighted CDs in my collection when I did a three month ripping marathon a few years ago - and I remember this was one of them.
Anyway by means other than EAC or dbpoweramp I obtained a digital lossless copy of that album and my CD copy is stored with the others in the loft.
And I don't care, this album along with Scarlet and other Stories is a cracker <lol>
Which mode of ripping are you using in your settings? Burst mode, EAC secure ripper or Paranoia mode? This makes all the difference. I avoid paranoia mode as there's just no need for it. Secure ripper seems OK for the vast majority of CDs but there's always the odd one it starts getting stuck on, so in that case go for Burst mode which is always the fastest, then just have a good listen for any clicks. I've so rarely had issues using Burst mode that it became my mode of choice (until moving to a Mac for all of my ripping anyway).
Parcelmonkey
30-08-2018, 20:24
EAC works really well if set up correctly. Definitely ignore Paranoia mode as already stated but if whilst ripping it detects errors it will try to correct these errors by discs already on the database and filling in the gaps.
If the grid at the bottom of the rip is flowing red it's detecting errors. Sometimes it just can't cross reference the issues and then I rip using Foobar. I doubt you'd tell the difference tbh.
There are plenty of good on-line tutorials for correct setting up of EAC if you haven't done so already. Ideally don't go with quick set up, take your time and did you cross reference an original disc to read your drives offset etc?
Ade...
EAC is set up in Secure mode.
It seems fine to me in this mode, but thanks for the tips.
Smegger68
07-09-2018, 07:38
Secure mode is best with EAC, especially good if you have a drive capable of reading C2 data.
For the odd disk that just wont play nicely I switch to burst mode which may not be 100% accurate but at least delivers listenable results :)
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