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If I rember correctly: by default dbPoweramp does a fast rip.This because most of the time CDs are read without a flaw.Ii compares the rip against tha accuraterip database.Is the rip is not correct, it re-rips but this time in en more severe mode.
I would also rip all future CDs securely, a secure rip with, for example dBpoweramp, takes much longer due to error checking and error correction when compared to a quick and dirty rip.If you acquire very many more CDs and quick rip them you will be spending just that much more time re-ripping them.I use a burst rip only as a last resort when a used CD is so damaged that I cannot get a secure rip due to the massive number of uncorrectable errors that are present, I can at least play the music back as a WAV file when otherwise I wouldn't have it in my library.Scotty
Yup. Doing all new ones this way, slowly redoing the ones I did with the quick method. After using dBpoweramp is it fairly straight forward for musicBee to find them? I will purchase Dbpoweramp based on everybody's recommendationsRussellc.
Some people like to use Exact Audio Rip which also has the auccurate rip feature but it's free. Their link is below:http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/en/I actually started using Dbpoweramp because its more feature laden and was recommended by the people I bought my cd robot from. However, EAC will do the job for free.
In MusicBee you can set monitored folders (Edit > Preferences > Library)Let dBpoweramp rip to a root folder e.g. C:\Sound\ or \\NAS\Noise\Within this folder a sub folder for each CDLet MusicBee monitor this folder