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Foobar Ripping FLAC

post #1 of 14
Thread Starter 
I have the latest Flac version. When I go to rip my Pink Floyd Remastered CD to Flac, the bitrate is only like 800 or below. Whats the deal. I'm using Flac level 8.
post #2 of 14
Isn't level 8 the most intensive compression rate? 800kbps makes sense.
post #3 of 14
That sounds about right. The bit rate is post compression, i.e., the compressed file size divided by the track length.
post #4 of 14
FLAC doesn't throw away any information, but it will compress some music better than others. Normal WAV files are at 1411kbps, and FLAC will be able to compress any WAV that doesn't consist of pure white noise to be less than that, with no loss of information.

Here are some average bitrates for some albums I have in FLAC:
Beethoven - Fifth Symphony: 696 kbps
Metallica - Master of Puppets: 925 kbps
The Police - Synchronicity: 741 kbps
David Newman - Serenity Soundtrack: 647 kbps
Dream Theater - Awake: 1012 kbps
Pink Floyd - The Wall: 748 kbps

It's not that Dream Theater's "Awake" is higher quality than the "Serenity" soundtrack, it's just that the music in Serenity is compressed more easily.
post #5 of 14
Not to hijack but do you guys know good particular tracks to use for ABXing? I just recopied all my flacs to my computer that I had stored on DVD's and I'm trying to pick an audio codec and bitrate.
post #6 of 14
Thread Starter 
So are my "The Wall Remastered" files the best that they can be at level 8?
post #7 of 14
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shizdan View Post
So are my "The Wall Remastered" files the best that they can be at level 8?
If, by "best", you mean "smallest", then yes. If you're worried about sound quality, don't be -- FLAC is lossless at all compression levels.
post #8 of 14
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shizdan View Post
So are my "The Wall Remastered" files the best that they can be at level 8?
Whether it's level 1 or 8, it's the same thing for sound quality. Compression level is all that is. I use EAC and usually use 5...
post #9 of 14
Thread Starter 
I just wasn't sure. Since my files are the smallest size that I'd be loosing quality.
post #10 of 14
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shizdan View Post
I just wasn't sure. Since my files are the smallest size that I'd be loosing quality.
Nope, you're good. The only real price of greater compression is the increased time it takes to compress the files. Regardless of the compression level, the decompressed data is the same. Neat, huh?
post #11 of 14
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shizdan View Post
I just wasn't sure. Since my files are the smallest size that I'd be loosing quality.
Not when it comes to lossless...
post #12 of 14
Thread Starter 
Also I ripped the CD to 24 Bit. Is that an advantage over ripping to 16 bit?
post #13 of 14
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shizdan View Post
Also I ripped the CD to 24 Bit. Is that an advantage over ripping to 16 bit?
No, not from a CD. CDs are only 16 bits, so you aren't adding any actual dynamic range this way. You should encode CD audio at 16 bits.
post #14 of 14
So, what is the problem?
FLAC is lossless and compress the file(s) as tightly as it can. That said, 800kbps looks about right...
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