![]() ![]() If your drive is producing the expected 6-sample offset, then you should realize this is quite excellent among CD drives and more precise than almost any real CD player was ever able to muster. You can clearly hear what sounds like a pop at the beginning of the song, but that is just part of the song that came before it being attached to its beginning.ĭoes anyone know what is causing this? I should mention that my rips are being reported as accurate. The second snippet is from one of my rips. The first snippet is a recording of playback from Spotify, which has the correct starting and ending points for songs because the music on there is not from a CD rip. If possible, you should listen with headphones to get the best idea of what is happening. I have provided below some audio snippets to give you a clear example of what I’m dealing with. Apparently, I’m not supposed to be able to hear the effects of my read offset no matter how high or low the value is. ![]() In some instances, it is quite apparent, and in others, it is subtle, but it’s noticeable to me and I want to fix it. I’ve noticed that on gapless albums or albums with very few or no zero samples between tracks, part of a previous track will be at the beginning of a new track, therefore making for an unpleasant beginning to a song. I’ve asked the people at the dbpoweramp forums about this and the ultimate conclusion of my thread was that they don’t know what’s up and I should buy another drive and experiment with it to see if this happens. My disc drive is reading discs at the wrong index points. I am experiencing issues with my CD rips. I’m not sure if anyone here will know of a solution to this but I figured I’d ask seeing as Discogs is a place where collectors buy music to rip it. ![]()
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