Ripping program

joeparaski
joeparaski Posts: 1,865
edited December 2008 in The Clubhouse
I am considering ripping all my cd collection to a hard drive. Which is better, I-tunes or EAC and why? Are there other things I should consider?

Joe
Amplifiers: 1-SAE Mark IV, 4-SAE 2400, 1-SAE 2500, 2-SAE 2600, 1-Buttkicker BKA 1000N w/2-tactile transducers. Sources: Sony BDP CX7000es, Sony CX300/CX400/CX450/CX455, SAE 8000 tuner, Akai 4000D R2R, Technics 1100A TT, Epson 8500UB with Carada 100". Speakers:Polk SDA SRS, 3.1TL, FXi5, FXi3, 2-SVS 20-29, Yamaha, SVS center sub. Power:2-Monster HTS3500, Furman M-8D & RR16 Plus. 2-SAE 4000 X-overs, SAE 5000a noise reduction, MSB Link DAC III, MSB Powerbase, Behringer 2496, Monarchy DIP 24/96.
Post edited by joeparaski on

Comments

  • sucks2beme
    sucks2beme Posts: 5,601
    edited December 2008
    joeparaski wrote: »
    I am considering ripping all my cd collection to a hard drive. Which is better, I-tunes or EAC and why? Are there other things I should consider?

    Joe

    EAC. It's free and proven to work well. Itunes? I avoid anything with the big
    "I" in it. Is EAC better? I don't know, but EAC works very well.
    I'll leave it to the Apple fans to tell you how good I-tunes is.
    "The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." --Thomas Jefferson
  • nadams
    nadams Posts: 5,877
    edited December 2008
    I typically use CDEx paired with the FLAC plugin. Rip straight from CD to FLAC :)
    Ludicrous gibs!
  • seeclear
    seeclear Posts: 1,242
    edited December 2008
    I use CD Xtractor from sourceforge. It is free, but I don't know if it does flac. It hasn't been updated in a while, and is no longer in development, but it works well for ripping to mp3 format.

    http://sourceforge.net/projects/xtractor/
    "Don't forget to change your politician. They are like diapers they need to be changed regularly, and for the same reason."
  • spwuinmk67
    spwuinmk67 Posts: 797
    edited December 2008
    I've used itunes for years with no problems, it gets your track info, and keeps everything organized in all folders and sub folders.
    1993 Ford Ranger super cab:
    Pioneer Premier DEH-P880PRS
    MB Quart QSD216
    in need of amps and subs

    Home:
    52" Sharp Aquos
    PolkAudio Monitor 10's
    Harmon Kardon HK3375
    Xbox 360
    PolkAudio XM tuner

    Owner and co-designer of www.basicholdem.com
  • spwuinmk67
    spwuinmk67 Posts: 797
    edited December 2008
    I've used itunes for years with no problems, it gets your track info, and keeps everything organized in all folders and sub folders.
    1993 Ford Ranger super cab:
    Pioneer Premier DEH-P880PRS
    MB Quart QSD216
    in need of amps and subs

    Home:
    52" Sharp Aquos
    PolkAudio Monitor 10's
    Harmon Kardon HK3375
    Xbox 360
    PolkAudio XM tuner

    Owner and co-designer of www.basicholdem.com
  • ZOOPDOOP22
    ZOOPDOOP22 Posts: 158
    edited December 2008
    Here is another point for the iTunes crowd. I use it to manage a library I have had going for 4 years now.. With iTunes, like the above said, you get track info and it is easy to add album artwork. If you want to backup the library with art included and/or move it to another machine and have it work instantly you need to copy two files and two folders.. i believe it is your music folder, a library.xml, artwork folder, and one other that I am forgetting as I am not at my machine now.

    Very simple.. has worked for me with no problems. One thing I am curious about is their lossless format has changed in the last couple major updates. It used to make lossless aac at around 2000+ bit rate but with my last recent test it came out to around 1300. This were also varying bit rates.

    More efficient? Less quality (i doubt it).. I'm not sure
  • John30_30
    John30_30 Posts: 1,024
    edited December 2008
    EAC is the most anal, error-correcting, tweakable ripping app there is, if accuracy is what you're about. Download EAC and look through its menu settings.

    iTunes is much more about the library, and basically only rips in mp3 or the various Apple formats. EAC rips to all the other formats. dbPoweramp is also an excellent ripper and transcoder. Yet another favorite is foobar, which has replaygain, if you're into that.
  • joeparaski
    joeparaski Posts: 1,865
    edited December 2008
    Actually I-tunes has a WAV encoder also.

    Joe
    Amplifiers: 1-SAE Mark IV, 4-SAE 2400, 1-SAE 2500, 2-SAE 2600, 1-Buttkicker BKA 1000N w/2-tactile transducers. Sources: Sony BDP CX7000es, Sony CX300/CX400/CX450/CX455, SAE 8000 tuner, Akai 4000D R2R, Technics 1100A TT, Epson 8500UB with Carada 100". Speakers:Polk SDA SRS, 3.1TL, FXi5, FXi3, 2-SVS 20-29, Yamaha, SVS center sub. Power:2-Monster HTS3500, Furman M-8D & RR16 Plus. 2-SAE 4000 X-overs, SAE 5000a noise reduction, MSB Link DAC III, MSB Powerbase, Behringer 2496, Monarchy DIP 24/96.