MP3 would take longer than it took to rip it. Actually, non-on-the-fly mode stems from a time when CD drives would get out of sync when samples were not collected by the application at the same speed that the drive read them. No, there's no risk of data loss in on-the-fly mode. Then go to the Cover art tab and uncheck FLAC Metadata there too. In the configuration dialog, go to the Tags page and then uncheck FLAC Metadata in the list of tagging formats. In fre:ac's default distribution, those are ALAC, Musepack, OptimFROG, TAK and WavPack (for ALAC this will change probably with the next release).Īnd yes, it's possible to disable all metadata. Generally, fre:ac creates temp files in the Windows temp folder only when using external codecs. wav file? If you would like me to have a look at the file, upload it to a cloud drive and send me a link to does not use any temporary files when ripping CDs to FLAC (unless you disabled the On-the-fly encoding option, but even then, the temporary files are created in the output folder, not the Windows temp folder). Not sure where the additional 200 kB of empty space would come from. In both cases, this will lead to file contents looking different when compared side-by-side. Sometimes the developers find ways to improve compression without affecting format compatibility and sometimes the settings of the standard compression levels are adjusted. The difference in the FLAC files must be due to different FLAC version. When I have to convert tracks which contains metadata “artist, tittle, album etc.” is it possible to set to automatically to ignore them and export a file with empty metadata? (At least for artist, tittle, album) I would not perform a further huge amount of GBs writing cycles on that drive. Is it possible to change the directory path of the temporary files generated by free AC? I wish backup my CD archive to FLAC and my Windows drive is a quite old SSD. In the settings I don't find how to fix/change it: I have 2 questions, I don't know whether I have to open separates topics. Though, I see that in the decompressed WAV file by free AC, at the end of the file there is about 200KB of additional space filled with “00”. The body of the decompressed WAV file is anyway identical the original file. Maybe is it because Audacity uses FLAC encoder V1.3.2? It should be exactly the same concerning the encoding algorithm. I see that at the same compression level (8), the files are binary completely different. Now the FLAC file compressed with free AC is even a few KB smaller than the file by Audacity. I was sure it was a 16 bit track, but it was 24 bit.
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