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Apart from the black disc idea, a lot of the info in that document is IMO, false.
Audio an Data are read/interpreted differently. They are however not stored differently. They are both stored as binary digital. A HDD has no "timing" when it comes to its use, unlike an audio CD. A HDD has no "clock".
The chances of a CD-ROM misreading a bit are so slim, that it essentially never happens. Take a look at some cd-roms error rates...
You could maybe convince me that copies sound different from the original..but not for some of the reasons he mentioned.
I agree with most of what you wrote, but i didnt find any comments on what you really think of the article.
I know you tried some CD-Readers and Writers, but what about the results? Because to Audio guys like us, who cares if it sounds ilogical if it sounds good?
So...did you burned some Black CD's ? Do they sound better ? Because i can understand that the Black CD's sound better than the other types - Silver,Gold,Platinum,etc - but BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL ???
How ?? As you said...if there is an error....there is an error !
but I WILL say that the copies I burn to black CDR's definitely track better and also read the menu and "lock" in the signal faster.
...... Third, the reduced errors in CDROM reading then may just within the errors correction capability so that the remaining errors are mostly corrected before they are burnt to a new CD. So, the burnt CD may therefore contains much less errors than the original. Hence the copied sounds better than original.Is this logical?
Oh...PhatPhreddy ! I added your msn contact to my list, i hope we can talk about HTPC - HOW CAN YOU MAKE A PC SOUND LIKE A LEXICON ??
Now, what you are saying is that when we are copying the CD in a CDROM drive to a hard disk, we are correcting the errors that are possible to correct ? Always ? Or must we use a special software like the one mentioned above ?Do the CDROM drives correct the errors even when simply copying the .WAV to hard disk ?
I made some copies in Black CD's from some of my original ones.I used a dedicated hard disk, my CDROM has 100% accuracy on reading the files - at least they are all equal , i tried to extract the tracks 2 or 3 times.The only thing i didnt folow by the book was the recording, because my Nero only let me record at 4x minimum. So instead of 1x i ended up with 4x recordings.
Also, my comment above about the black disks tracking better is in comparison to copies I've made on other CD-R blanks, not to the original CD's.
I dissagree with Larry that EAC is not the best tool for the task
I did not see on what you disagreed with me. I think we both have no dispution on that EAC is good at its task.
SamL wrote: You can skip step one with the correct CD reading software. Try EAC - Exact Audio Copy. http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/ This CD reading software does a very different job for a different purpose from the step one of checking reading quality and it cannot tell what the step one tries to tell. This type of the software tries to correct the erorrs while reading. That's why the author found different software sounds differently. The step one tries to check the hardware reading quality before any touchs on the music by software. If to check CDROM drive's quality, do step one and avoid using any software like this, otherwise the results touched by this type of software have to be interpreted differently. The errors reported by this type of software may not be caused by the reading CDROM drives, in the other hand, errors caused by reading may not be reported, so that it does not tell how well the CDROM drives or CD writers do the reading.