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	<title type="html"><![CDATA[Redump Forum — What does this comment mean?]]></title>
	<link rel="self" href="http://forum.redump.org/feed/atom/topic/16628/" />
	<updated>2017-11-19T01:54:05Z</updated>
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	<id>http://forum.redump.org/topic/16628/what-does-this-comment-mean/</id>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/57049/#p57049" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="quotebox"><cite>Egen wrote:</cite><blockquote><p>Okay, question about another audio disc comment.</p><p><a href="http://redump.org/disc/34204/">http://redump.org/disc/34204/</a></p><p>&quot;Last 48 bytes of Track 25 filled with 00&quot;</p><p>This comment, respectfully, makes no sense.</p></blockquote></div><p>Dunno, ask Jackal, maybe he suspects that it was dumped incorrectly (without overreading into lead-out).</p><div class="quotebox"><cite>Egen wrote:</cite><blockquote><p>The last 48 bytes are not filled with 00. The disc was created with a +18 offset. If you rip the disc with a +30 offset, then sure, you&#039;ll have some extra silent samples, but... they&#039;re extra. Why would you increase the offset further than the actual data on the disc exists?</p></blockquote></div><p>The disc offset for audio CDs is always assumed 0 unless there is data in lead-out or in the first pregap.<br /><a href="http://redump.org/disc/14890/">http://redump.org/disc/14890/</a> -- a &quot;possible offset&quot; comment can be used like here, though.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[F1ReB4LL]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/13/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-19T01:54:05Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/57049/#p57049</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/56979/#p56979" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Okay, question about another audio disc comment.</p><p><a href="http://redump.org/disc/34204/">http://redump.org/disc/34204/</a></p><p>&quot;Last 48 bytes of Track 25 filled with 00&quot;</p><p>This comment, respectfully, makes no sense. The last 48 bytes are not filled with 00. The disc was created with a +18 offset. If you rip the disc with a +30 offset, then sure, you&#039;ll have some extra silent samples, but... they&#039;re extra. Why would you increase the offset further than the actual data on the disc exists?</p><p>+18 is a ridiculously common offset. Off the top of my head, basically every King Records CD ever has an offset of +18. Why do people insist on ripping every CD with the same offset? That&#039;s only taking their drive&#039;s offset into account, and there are always two offsets to take into account: the offset of your drive, AND the offset of the drive that created the CD. Most of the time we can&#039;t know the offset of the mastering drive, but sometimes we can.</p><p>I don&#039;t understand this personally. You just introduce silent samples by doing it this way, and you miss non-silent samples on other CDs such as La Pucelle by not adjusting the offset further. What&#039;s the point of this - for everyone to get the same incorrect results?</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Egen]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/62435/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-15T07:35:02Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/56979/#p56979</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/56965/#p56965" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Sample offset correction is measured in samples, 1 sample = 4 bytes = 1/588 sector.<br />75 sectors in lead-out means 75*2352 additional bytes of data after the last track, way too large to be called an offset, hence not included.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[F1ReB4LL]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/13/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-14T08:43:06Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/56965/#p56965</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/56960/#p56960" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Not samples, sample offset. The part in EAC called &quot;read sample offset correction&quot;. For every one unit you change that by, 75 sectors are affected, right? Or no?</p><p>The comment is epically confusing <img src="http://forum.redump.org/img/smilies/hmm.png" width="15" height="15" alt="hmm" /></p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Egen]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/62435/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-14T04:19:54Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/56960/#p56960</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/56955/#p56955" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Sectors, not samples. 1 sector = 588 samples.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[F1ReB4LL]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/13/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-14T00:48:48Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/56955/#p56955</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[What does this comment mean?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://forum.redump.org/post/56953/#p56953" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://redump.org/disc/29257/">http://redump.org/disc/29257/</a></p><p>&quot;Missing data in Lead-out Zone. Should be dump with +75 sector offset due to desync issue.&quot;</p><p>As an owner of this CD and somebody who actually knows how to use EAC, I know that there is data further than the typical &quot;global offset&quot; used by everyone to dump every CD on the planet. What&#039;s confusing is that the comment says it needs 75 sectors. Unless I&#039;ve really started to forget stuff, 75 sectors is +1 to the sample offset in EAC, right? If so, that&#039;s incorrect, because this disc needs +2 to the usual sample offset. For example, with my Plextor PX-716A which has a +30 offset, I need to rip this CD with a +32 offset in EAC to catch every sample.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Egen]]></name>
				<uri>http://forum.redump.org/user/62435/</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2017-11-13T21:36:38Z</updated>
			<id>http://forum.redump.org/post/56953/#p56953</id>
		</entry>
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