
February 1st 04, 08:10 AM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
I started a thread about CD recorders which I found very helpful so this is
a follow up. Can anyone guide me as to the optimum settings for using Nero
for copying commercial music CD's. I am plodding through my Nero Express
manual after getting some high frequency distortion on the odd track so I
want to make sure everything is tweaked OK. I am using just the default
settings but in default my output file format is set to MP3 Pro. This
doesn't seem right to me, should I be using wave file as a more appropriate
setting? How many bits should I be using? Anything else I need to think
about.
Once again I thank all the experts out there.
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February 1st 04, 10:31 AM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
If you only want to copy complete discs to bak them up you should get hold
of Exact Audio Copy and use the "copy to image and create cue sheet" option.
This creates a WAV file for the complete disc and the cue sheet tells
whatever app you use to burn the image where to put the track markers. This
method allows you to copy albums where tracks run into each other (such as
live albums) withou breaking them up.
You can burn from cue sheets in nero and the latest version of EAC has a
button for this too (haven't tried it yet).
You can get EAC from www.exactaudiocopy.de/
Cheers
Colin
"RJH" wrote in message
...
"Informer" wrote in message
...
I started a thread about CD recorders which I found very helpful so this
is
a follow up. Can anyone guide me as to the optimum settings for using
Nero
for copying commercial music CD's. I am plodding through my Nero
Express
manual after getting some high frequency distortion on the odd track so
I
want to make sure everything is tweaked OK. I am using just the
default
settings but in default my output file format is set to MP3 Pro. This
doesn't seem right to me, should I be using wave file as a more
appropriate
setting? How many bits should I be using? Anything else I need to think
about.
Once again I thank all the experts out there.
Do you want to copy entire disks or individual tracks?
If disk, choose 'copy entire disk' from the right hand menu. You *should*
be
OK if your writer and reader are on separate channels (that is, connected
by
separate cables to separate controllers on your motherboard - unlikely but
possible). If they're not I suggest you use the next method ...
If tracks (to make a compilation for example) the best method is a bit
more
complicated - you need to extract the wav data from the original using
EAC.
Then start Nero Express, click Music, Audio CD, then add the tracks you
exported from EAC.
This is just one of many methods, and works best IMO.
Rob
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February 1st 04, 12:29 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
"Colin Anderson" wrote in message
...
If you only want to copy complete discs to bak them up you should get hold
of Exact Audio Copy and use the "copy to image and create cue sheet"
option.
This creates a WAV file for the complete disc and the cue sheet tells
whatever app you use to burn the image where to put the track markers.
This
method allows you to copy albums where tracks run into each other (such as
live albums) withou breaking them up.
You can burn from cue sheets in nero and the latest version of EAC has a
button for this too (haven't tried it yet).
You can get EAC from www.exactaudiocopy.de/
I've since found that Nero's 'copy disk', 'disk at once' manages live albums
as well.
Rob
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February 1st 04, 12:35 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 10:31:27 GMT, "Colin Anderson"
wrote:
If you only want to copy complete discs to bak them up you should get hold
of Exact Audio Copy and use the "copy to image and create cue sheet" option.
This creates a WAV file for the complete disc and the cue sheet tells
whatever app you use to burn the image where to put the track markers. This
method allows you to copy albums where tracks run into each other (such as
live albums) withou breaking them up.
Indeed; however, its not the only to do this: most burning s/w can
take multiple WAV files and perform a disc-at-once burn w/o gaps
between tracks. Unfortunately, some of the more popular burning apps
default to track-at-once (TAO), and either need to this to be reset as
a user configuration or (even worse) reset every time a disc is
created :-(
You can burn from cue sheets in nero and the latest version of EAC has a
button for this too (haven't tried it yet).
You can get EAC from www.exactaudiocopy.de/
EAC's burning capability, for multiple WAV sources, works DAO by
defaullt, as does CDRWIN ( www.goldenhawk.com).
Julian
--
Julian Fowler
julian (at) bellevue-barn (dot) org (dot) uk
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February 1st 04, 03:19 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 10:31:27 GMT, "Colin Anderson"
wrote:
If you only want to copy complete discs to bak them up you should get hold
of Exact Audio Copy and use the "copy to image and create cue sheet" option.
This creates a WAV file for the complete disc and the cue sheet tells
whatever app you use to burn the image where to put the track markers. This
method allows you to copy albums where tracks run into each other (such as
live albums) withou breaking them up.
You can burn from cue sheets in nero and the latest version of EAC has a
button for this too (haven't tried it yet).
You can get EAC from www.exactaudiocopy.de/
No need. Nero's "Copy disk" function does exactly what it says.
You don't need to consider tracks, cue sheets, markers etc. at all.
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February 1st 04, 04:11 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 15:19:15 +0000, Laurence Payne
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 10:31:27 GMT, "Colin Anderson"
wrote:
If you only want to copy complete discs to bak them up you should get hold
of Exact Audio Copy and use the "copy to image and create cue sheet" option.
This creates a WAV file for the complete disc and the cue sheet tells
whatever app you use to burn the image where to put the track markers. This
method allows you to copy albums where tracks run into each other (such as
live albums) withou breaking them up.
You can burn from cue sheets in nero and the latest version of EAC has a
button for this too (haven't tried it yet).
You can get EAC from www.exactaudiocopy.de/
No need. Nero's "Copy disk" function does exactly what it says.
You don't need to consider tracks, cue sheets, markers etc. at all.
Does Nero do accurate DAE (to the same extent that EAC does)? The
last time I checked (maybe 18 months ago) it did not, and with
anything other than pristine source material the "Copy disk" function
produced results that were definitely not bit-accurate with respect to
the original.
Julian
--
Julian Fowler
julian (at) bellevue-barn (dot) org (dot) uk
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February 1st 04, 04:28 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 16:11:37 +0000, Julian Fowler
wrote:
No need. Nero's "Copy disk" function does exactly what it says.
You don't need to consider tracks, cue sheets, markers etc. at all.
Does Nero do accurate DAE (to the same extent that EAC does)? The
last time I checked (maybe 18 months ago) it did not, and with
anything other than pristine source material the "Copy disk" function
produced results that were definitely not bit-accurate with respect to
the original.
He's trying to copy an audio cd in order to play it on his hi-fi.
Who cares?
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February 1st 04, 04:48 PM
posted to alt.audio.equipment,uk.rec.audio
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optimum recording settings using nero
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 16:28:42 +0000, Laurence Payne
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 16:11:37 +0000, Julian Fowler
wrote:
No need. Nero's "Copy disk" function does exactly what it says.
You don't need to consider tracks, cue sheets, markers etc. at all.
Does Nero do accurate DAE (to the same extent that EAC does)? The
last time I checked (maybe 18 months ago) it did not, and with
anything other than pristine source material the "Copy disk" function
produced results that were definitely not bit-accurate with respect to
the original.
He's trying to copy an audio cd in order to play it on his hi-fi.
Who cares?
LOL ... he's trying to copy an audio CD ... and doesn't care whether
the result is an accurate copy of the original? ISTR that this thread
started from the OP's request for assistance in the situation where
copies were audibly *different* from the original - if you want the
guarantee of audio equivalence, surely you need to at least aspire to
equivalence in the digital domain!
--
Julian Fowler
julian (at) bellevue-barn (dot) org (dot) uk
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