———- Post added at 11:51 AM ———- Previous post was at 11:41 AM ———-
They are all .cda files now with 1kb size. Now what? They are on Drive F:
———- Post added at 11:51 AM ———- Previous post was at 11:41 AM ———-
They are all .cda files now with 1kb size. Now what? They are on Drive F:
If this is what you’re seeing, that’s exactly what you would see if you put a CD into your computer and opened it to see the files on it. This is normal.
Therefore you should be able to open whatever player / ripper you use, tell it to see the virtual drive and rip the disc that way.
What is the album? If you’re hearing static it might be a DTS CD.
Don’t try to play it, just try to rip it as both me and Leon said first.
———- Post added at 01:02 PM ———- Previous post was at 01:01 PM ———-
Because whatever I attempt to do doesn’t work lol.
I still haven’t gotten either of the registration info emails I was supposed to get from that site. Is it still glitchy and slow?
———- Post added at 01:13 PM ———- Previous post was at 01:11 PM ———-
Well I guess it is glitchy, because the download just reset itself.
———- Post added at 01:15 PM ———- Previous post was at 01:14 PM ———-
Try this one out: I’ve been using it because it’s got a 2GB size limit. The catch is it’s good only for two weeks. I’ve used it for everything lately:
No registration or anything.
———- Post added at 01:38 PM ———- Previous post was at 01:15 PM ———-
5.1 Music Disc – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5.1_Music_Disc)
Optical Disc | DTS (http://www.dts.com/professionals/sound-industries/optical-disc-audio.aspx?tracking=Optical+Disc#) (click on the CD tab)
When I uploaded Titanic, this is what it was.
SACD is actually a DVD.
I know that, though the file structure and whatnot are generally unreadable by most computers, though there have been some advancements made if I recall.
I only meant that I had downloaded an ISO that gave me issues just as Lockdown did, but in my case it was an SACD ISO, not a regular audio CD ISO which is what he was downloading.
By the way, how this all got resolved was this:
When Lockdown mentioned getting static I knew he was dealing with a DTS CD, and when he sent me a link to the torrent I confirmed that was the issue.
But I’m not sure still how it got resolved: what was the final format?
SACD info: Super Audio CD – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Audio_CD)
Interesting, but pointless. There aren’t the artists out there that can embrace this technology. I think Jean Michel Jarre released an SACD, but I never bought it – upon reflection, maybe I should have.
DTS.bin: 515 MiB
extracted mutichanned .wav: 3 GiB
6-channels .flac with default compression: 782 MiB
" " " " best " : 772 MiB
Little difference between default and best compression, and a 50% bigger file than the original .bin, but we get a 1:4 size ratio in relation to the uncompressed .wav.
I’m glad to see that, if needed, we can count on FLAC also here.
Also, apart from the PS3 hack, does anyone know of another way to rip an SACD?
Many thanks.
I don’t know about the ripping, sorry.
Also, apart from the PS3 hack, does anyone know of another way to rip an SACD?
Many thanks.
It was the Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack.
The only other way is to use an SACD player with the analog multichannel outputs, play the disc and hit "record" using either some special equipment capable of recording multiple tracks at once and using a high quality setting for recording (96kHz/24-bit is fine), or do it the way I did with my "Legend Of Zorro" SACD (when I had the player): Record one pair of channels at a time, and then very carefully sync them all together, also using 96/24 on my computer.
The only other way is to use an SACD player with the analog multichannel outputs, play the disc and hit "record" using either some special equipment capable of recording multiple tracks at once and using a high quality setting for recording (96kHz/24-bit is fine), or do it the way I did with my "Legend Of Zorro" SACD (when I had the player): Record one pair of channels at a time, and then very carefully sync them all together, also using 96/24 on my computer.
That’s drastic. Reminds me of pointing a DV camera at a laptop screen to get around Macrovision.
I’ve recorded film soundtracks before using the optical output of the player, and piping it straight into the computer. I haven’t seen an SACD.
Still, it would be interesting to see if anyone has ripped an SACD with software.
The only way your analogy would match would be to hold a microphone up to each speaker when playing an SACD and record it that way. That is not remotely what I am referring to at all. Your analogy doesn’t apply.
I’ve recorded film soundtracks before using the optical output of the player, and piping it straight into the computer.
This is what I am referring to, only instead of an optical out, it would be analog out – the RCA outputs. SACD players (usually older ones without HDMI) have six RCA-type analog outputs, one for each channel and typically would only output the multichannel audio through those analog outputs. As I said, that’s how I recorded my "Legend Of Zorro" SACD so I could have a backup in case anything happened to the player – which it turned out I had to give up so it was a good thing I made the recording. Even turned it into a DTS CD as well. Still have the SACD album itself, though.
Still, it would be interesting to see if anyone has ripped an SACD with software.
SACDs cannot be ripped with software because computers, though many have been trying to make progress and change this, cannot read the DSD layer on the disc. If it’s a hybrid SACD a computer can only read the CD layer.
The only other way is to use an SACD player with the analog multichannel outputs, play the disc and hit "record" using either some special equipment capable of recording multiple tracks at once and using a high quality setting for recording (96kHz/24-bit is fine), or do it the way I did with my "Legend Of Zorro" SACD (when I had the player): Record one pair of channels at a time, and then very carefully sync them all together, also using 96/24 on my computer.
Would you do that?? Because I cannot find this in FLAC :/
You’ll need a microphone and the use of one speaker – make sure the second one is off otherwise you’ll get a lot of crossover. Then play the content six times, each time selecting a different channel and recording that. Then synch it all up… I was of course joking about the camcorder thing and the crudeness of such tactics!
I’ve searched to see if anyone out there has ripped an SACD with software – and so far it’s all negative unfortunately – the CD layer yes, but not the DVD layer. So if you want lossless and not the analogue mumbo-jumbo, the only way to go is to copy the output stream through the SPDIF as I suggested earlier.
For playback, the compressed AC-3 / DTS stream will need to be decoded using something like media player classic which invokes ac3filter. If you want to save the channels, you can save them using something like AVS Audio Recorder, which can record up to 8 channels, but this is unnecessary unless you want to extract individual channels and sections. All this software can be downloaded for free.
Caveat: SPDIF was originally designed for 2 channel PCM. DTS and Dolby ride on this stream and are not native, meaning the sound card needs to be able to record SPDIF data as is. Annoyingly, this option is not always implemented. Check the spec.
Resolution (24 bits) and frequency (44100 Hz) same as the original.
Metadata courtesy of musicbrainz.
p455w0rd: twentyfourbits
As you were.