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Copying CD's
I know this is probably holy war territory, but I'm hoping for some
interesting ideas. Starting with an audio CD I can take a "bitwise" image, using something like Nero. I can then write that image to a writeable CD. I can take a bitwise image from the writeable CD and compare it to the bitwise image taken from the original CD. They are identical (with the possible exception of a time stamp inserted in the image). My brother-in-law claims to be able to hear the difference between the original and the copy, but only when the copy was written at greater than 4x speed. What plausible causes exist for the audio being different when the individual bits being read off the CD are not? They may arrive with subtly differing timings, but the sequence is identical. I'm sure the timing of the bits varies every time a CD is played, due to varying rotational speeds of the CD. -- Steve Swift http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html http://www.ringers.org.uk |
Copying CD's
On Wed, 23 May 2007 15:30:19 +0100, Steve Swift
wrote: I know this is probably holy war territory, but I'm hoping for some interesting ideas. Starting with an audio CD I can take a "bitwise" image, using something like Nero. I can then write that image to a writeable CD. I can take a bitwise image from the writeable CD and compare it to the bitwise image taken from the original CD. They are identical (with the possible exception of a time stamp inserted in the image). My brother-in-law claims to be able to hear the difference between the original and the copy, but only when the copy was written at greater than 4x speed. What plausible causes exist for the audio being different when the individual bits being read off the CD are not? They may arrive with subtly differing timings, but the sequence is identical. I'm sure the timing of the bits varies every time a CD is played, due to varying rotational speeds of the CD. Test him, and see if he is right. Then, if you have something concrete to report come back and there will be something to talk about. Everything technical you have written above tells us no more than that you don't know how CDs work. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Copying CD's
On Wed, 23 May 2007 15:30:19 +0100, Steve Swift
wrote: My brother-in-law claims to be able to hear the difference between the original and the copy, but only when the copy was written at greater than 4x speed. And can he perform this test reliably? |
Copying CD's
"Steve Swift" wrote in message ... I know this is probably holy war territory, but I'm hoping for some interesting ideas. Starting with an audio CD I can take a "bitwise" image, using something like Nero. I can then write that image to a writeable CD. I can take a bitwise image from the writeable CD and compare it to the bitwise image taken from the original CD. They are identical (with the possible exception of a time stamp inserted in the image). My brother-in-law claims to be able to hear the difference between the original and the copy, but only when the copy was written at greater than 4x speed. What plausible causes exist for the audio being different when the individual bits being read off the CD are not? They may arrive with subtly differing timings, but the sequence is identical. I'm sure the timing of the bits varies every time a CD is played, due to varying rotational speeds of the CD. -- Steve Swift http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html http://www.ringers.org.uk If you can do a double-blind test, and he can do this reliably, then you have something. The only mechanism I can think of that could *possibly* account for sonic differences is if the copy is so poorly burnt that the CD player has a hard time reading the disc and there's a lot of interpolation going on. It would then be useful to repeat the DBT using another CD player of competely different type to see if the same results are obtained. Otherwise, two bit-identical CDs will necessarily sound the same. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
Copying CD's
"Steve Swift the Slow Wit " I know this is probably holy war territory, but I'm hoping for some interesting ideas. ** Spoken just like any died in the wool TROLLING ****WIT !! My brother-in-law claims ...... ** Then go get the dumb **** to post here himself. So we can ALL have some fun with the autistic cretin. ... to be able to hear the difference between the .. What plausible causes exist... ** Bewa irrational, logical fallacy in action. Facts must first be * established as correct * BEFORE one searches for hypotheses. ****wit audiophool asses like YOU never learn. ........ Phil |
Copying CD's
Phil Allison wrote:
So we can ALL have some fun with the autistic cretin. while I agree with plenty of what you post on here Being autistic does not mean, someone is a cretin |
Copying CD's
"Dave xxxx" Phil Allison wrote: So we can ALL have some fun with the autistic cretin. while I agree with plenty of what you post on here Being autistic does not mean, someone is a cretin ** ROTFL !! Dave the ****wit posts exactly like any congenital autistic. Sees only the words - but not the meaning. ....... Phil |
Copying CD's
Test him, and see if he is right. Then, if you have something concrete
to report come back and there will be something to talk about. Everything technical you have written above tells us no more than that you don't know how CDs work. I probably know more about how CD's work than 99.99% of the population since my honours degree in Physics contained a generous section on optics, my secondary subject, Electrical engineering brought me into daily contact with electronics, my post-graduate work in the Physics department at Birmingham University and the Rutherford Laboratory in Oxfordshire included daily use of lasers. I've owned CD players since 1982 (when the biggest problem was finding a CD, let alone knowing how they worked). But then what do I know? I'm just a Physicist with an electronics hobby. -- Steve Swift http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html http://www.ringers.org.uk |
Copying CD's
On Wed, 23 May 2007 17:27:25 +0100, Steve Swift
wrote: Test him, and see if he is right. Then, if you have something concrete to report come back and there will be something to talk about. Everything technical you have written above tells us no more than that you don't know how CDs work. I probably know more about how CD's work than 99.99% of the population since my honours degree in Physics contained a generous section on optics, my secondary subject, Electrical engineering brought me into daily contact with electronics, my post-graduate work in the Physics department at Birmingham University and the Rutherford Laboratory in Oxfordshire included daily use of lasers. I've owned CD players since 1982 (when the biggest problem was finding a CD, let alone knowing how they worked). But then what do I know? I'm just a Physicist with an electronics hobby. I simply don't believe you. Nobody who understands how CDs work would have written what you did. Were you asleep in class? Actually, now I read more closely what you have just written, none of that would of itself give you any insight into how CDs work. Optics doesn't do it, Electrics doesn't do it and lasers don't do it. Digital signal processing and audio are the disciplines relevant to the case. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Copying CD's
On 2007-05-23, Serge Auckland wrote:
"Steve Swift" wrote in message ... What plausible causes exist for the audio being different when the individual bits being read off the CD are not? They may arrive with subtly differing timings, but the sequence is identical. I'm sure the timing of the bits varies every time a CD is played, due to varying rotational speeds of the CD. If you can do a double-blind test, and he can do this reliably, then you have something. The only mechanism I can think of that could *possibly* account for sonic differences is if the copy is so poorly burnt that the CD player has a hard time reading the disc and there's a lot of interpolation going on. It would then be useful to repeat the DBT using another CD player of competely different type to see if the same results are obtained. Otherwise, two bit-identical CDs will necessarily sound the same. A common audiophile postulate for audibility of different discs of nominally identical material is "jitter". This surprises me a little, having looked at some AES papers on the audibility thresholds for jitter. Although the research does says that audible jitter at 10 kHz and above is remarkably low. Also it seems to me that the jitter hypothesis relies on inadequate engineering of clock extraction circuits to allow enough jitter to get through to the audio output. Quite possible I suppose, but eminently curable (and should not happen in the first place). -- John Phillips |
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