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#16
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Re: More about offsets?
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Here is the thing about Burst Mode: there is no error detection at all. It simply reads through the track as fast as it can and write the data to the file. This is why the track quality is always 100%, because the program never re-reads a sector, and thus according to the quote above, the track quality will be reported at 100%. It will not report any error messages unless ther is a serious problem and it can't read the disc at all. This is why we like secure mode . -Phil No members have liked this post.
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#17
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Re: More about offsets?
thanks so much, I get it now.
one time I ripped twice and got 100.00% and 99.00% on two passes yet the checksums were the same. Now it all makes sense.
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Checksums Demystified | ask for help in Technobabble thetradersden.org | ttd recommended free software/freeware webring shntool tlh eac foobar2000 spek audacity cdwave vlc Quote:
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#18
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Re: More about offsets?
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#19
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Re: More about offsets?
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-Phil No members have liked this post.
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#20
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Re: More about offsets?
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Last edited by tgc225; 2005-04-18 at 01:52 AM. |
#21
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Re: More about offsets?
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What confuses me to this day is how to burn audio CDs with someone else's offset? I've looked for an answer a while ago and never found one. I believe you still use your drive's write offset since the read offsets are to correct whatever "inaccuracy" your drive does on audio cds due to not being able to easily locate sectors on audio cds. Quote:
More info: http://users.pandora.be/satcp/eacoffsets00.htm#-a Another tip for anyone just configuring your drive. After you've spent 3-4 hours hunting through your CD collection to find CDs that match their database as the correct pressings for testing your drive's offsets, make a note on which CDs they were. I can't remember which ones worked for me and I have a feeling that the drive I have all configured is on its last legs. Which means I have to go throught the whole process all over again when I buy a new drive. Wish I knew which CDs those were.... Oh, and also write down your read, write and combined offset numbers with the CD names in case you have a bad computer day and you lose your C drive. No members have liked this post.
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#22
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Re: More about offsets?
Thanks for the info. I think the most reasonable explanation when it comes to incorrect offsets is that someone bought a new drive but didn't bother to change the offset value. For a few boots that I checked, while the offset value didn't match the drive that was in the log, it did match other drives in the database.
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#23
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Re: More about offsets?
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#24
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Re: More about offsets?
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Checksums Demystified | ask for help in Technobabble thetradersden.org | ttd recommended free software/freeware webring shntool tlh eac foobar2000 spek audacity cdwave vlc Quote:
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#25
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Re: More about offsets?
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The leadin and leadout are parts of the audio CD required by the redbook standard and placed at the very beginning and very end of the audio respectively, as the names imply. When you rip a disk with correct offsets, your drive doesn't actually read into the leadin or leadout but it thinks it is doing one or the other because it has been told to apply an offset. For instance, if your read offset correction is +98 this tells your drive to start reading 98 samples ahead of usual. The drive therefore thinks that when it gets to the end of the disk it has to read 98 samples into the leadout before stopping. It's not really reading into the leadout but it thinks it is, so if the drive can't read into the leadout it won't be able to read those last 98 samples. If your drive can't read into the leadout set EAC to 'fill missing samples with silence'. Odds are that those missing 98 samples were silence anyway. You can tell if your drive reads into the leadin or leadout from the tables, or you can tell by adjusting the offset and seeing if you get sync errors. If you have a positive offset correction and always get a sync error on the last track when you tell EAC to over read then your drive can't actually read into the leadout. Likewise if you have a negative offset correction and your drive can't read into the leadin, you will get sync errors on the first track if you tell EAC to over read. Note that there is only one setting for reading into both the leadin and leadout in EAC. So here's a summary: - positive offset correction - drive must read into leadout - if it can't, turn off over reading and set to 'fill in missing samples with silence' - negative offset correction - drive must read into leadin - if it can't, turn off over reading and set to 'fill in missing samples with silence' Strictly speaking exact copies are NOT possible if the extracting drive cannot over read as required. This is most drives. Oh well. Quote:
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From TTD's perspective all that matters is that the person who ripped a CD for torrenting here used the correct read offset (or used no read offset correction at all). NEVER use combined offset for ripping and torrenting files. Provided the files were ripped with proper offsets you never have to worry about another person's offsets when you burn the files to CD on your own computer. In fact, you NEVER have to worry about that even if they used the wrong offsets. If they used the wrong offsets and actually lost audio samples, you can't get them back anyway. The only thing you need to be concerned about is if you notice that there is no silence at all at the beginning of the first track or the end of the last track. You could end up losing some of the audio if you burn without write offset correction or can't write into the leadin/leadout. And remember, you want a CD that can play in any CD player out there, and NONE of them use offset correction during playback. But there is a very simple solution: just add a second of pure digital silence to the very beginning and very end of the disc before burning. Even half a second will be more than sufficient since that equals 22,050 samples, which is way way more than any read or write offset that I have ever seen. But I always add one second if necessary since that entirely avoids creating an SBE issue. (Whatever amount you add, just make sure it's an integer multiple of 588.) No members have liked this post.
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#26
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Re: More about offsets?
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#27
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Re: More about offsets?
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And sorry for all the complaining and not much contributing yet, but I'm still waiting on PNY for my replacement video card that's on my main computer No members have liked this post.
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#28
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Re: More about offsets?
we're waiting for our "Renegade Geek" to step away from World Of Warcraft and approve this
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Speaking of which, where's your cool avatar?
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Checksums Demystified | ask for help in Technobabble thetradersden.org | ttd recommended free software/freeware webring shntool tlh eac foobar2000 spek audacity cdwave vlc Quote:
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#29
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Re: More about offsets?
I have one more question that I wanted to clear up. I was reading the Coaster Factory link, and I'm a little confused. As far as I understand, to burn a new disc that will match an original, you need:
1) Someone to rip with EAC with the correct read offset 2) Then you need to burn using EAC with the correct write offset (and you can only use EAC to burn, because it's the only program that supports seperate write offsets) Or, the person who rips can rip with combined read/write offsets, and when you burn the file to a disc, it'll be correct, but the files on the hard drive have incorrect offsets. Is this correct? EDIT: I did a little bit of reading, and looks like I was wrong about the second option. If combined offets are used, then the burn must be made on the same drive from which it was ripped. No members have liked this post.
Last edited by tgc225; 2005-04-22 at 09:15 PM. |
#30
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Re: More about offsets?
that's right, including the edit... except the combined read/write offsets might be for two drives, your rom drive and your burner would be usual. don't use this option unless you have to!
the best thing to do is test if you can do an exact audio copy using your own computer and separate read and write offsets. I did this. I set up all my offsets, ripped a silver cd, then I generated a wholefile .md5 for the WAVs. I burned an audio cdr from these WAVs, switched it to the read drive, then ripped this cdr to a new folder. I tested the .md5 I created from the silver rip and it was perfect. EAC also mistook my audio cdr copy for the original silver when I put it in. The only thing left to test would be to rip a cdr on another computer then follow thru the steps and see if the .md5 still works. I'm pretty sure it will.
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