What happened to the 6 disc cd player?!
No worries. Hmm, maybe the software itself does it differently. I've never ripped my own CDs before with iTunes, just bought a few MP3s off iTunes, and checking now, it looks like MP3s bought straight from iTunes were ripped at 256 no VBR.
Yeah. Some are 256 and some are 128. I'm listening to "Crisis? What Crisis?" now and it was encoded at 128K. Sounds good enough, but I wouldn't have minded the iTunes folks using a higher bitrate.
Where did I mention CD's weren't digital?
All I said was audiophiles scoff at digital because it can't duplicate the audio quality of a record.
(yes this includes CDs as well)
One thing I've noticed is that most MP3s available are not ripped at maximum quality, or variable rates. I come across a lot that are 192kbps, and I admit I'm guilty of dumbing mine down to fit more on the CD.
Most people can't tell the difference between a high quality 320kbps MP3, or lossless FLAC and/or don't have higher quality audio equipment to hear it anyway.
I know a lot of aftermarket units can play MP3 through AAC, WMA and FLAC.
It'd be nice if the stock units played those.
All I said was audiophiles scoff at digital because it can't duplicate the audio quality of a record.
(yes this includes CDs as well)
One thing I've noticed is that most MP3s available are not ripped at maximum quality, or variable rates. I come across a lot that are 192kbps, and I admit I'm guilty of dumbing mine down to fit more on the CD.
Most people can't tell the difference between a high quality 320kbps MP3, or lossless FLAC and/or don't have higher quality audio equipment to hear it anyway.
I know a lot of aftermarket units can play MP3 through AAC, WMA and FLAC.
It'd be nice if the stock units played those.
I don't use iTunes, I rip from my own CDs. But my biggest problem is getting the ripper program to fill in all the music info correctly. I have many old CDs that don't have all the pre-amble info that the new CDs have so when I put them on my flash drive, usually the song name, artist, etc info is messed up. Having 1000 songs on a flash drive like this is a real mess. I'd rather have a 6 CD changer. Or find a good program where I can edit the MP3 files easily. Any what about volume? You put a few hundred songs on a flash drive they are going to be at all different volume levels. Using shuffle in this mode and some songs will be very soft and some very loud. You need to normalize the levels too.
Joe C
Joe C
I've been using MP3 CD's since I got my car back in '05, and I don't think I've ever used the other 5 slots because of that. I simply never needed them. I guess you all have much better hearing than me...Unless the song is truly terrible quality, I never notice much of a difference. 128 or 192 in a car is generally good enough quality for me. As far as 1,000 songs being a mess and being at different sound levels on a flash drive...It all depends on how well you can organize it when you're putting it on the drive. And unless we took a step backwards, the headunit should have some sort of setting to balance the sound levels from song to song.
I don't use iTunes, I rip from my own CDs. But my biggest problem is getting the ripper program to fill in all the music info correctly. I have many old CDs that don't have all the pre-amble info that the new CDs have so when I put them on my flash drive, usually the song name, artist, etc info is messed up. Having 1000 songs on a flash drive like this is a real mess. I'd rather have a 6 CD changer. Or find a good program where I can edit the MP3 files easily. Any what about volume? You put a few hundred songs on a flash drive they are going to be at all different volume levels. Using shuffle in this mode and some songs will be very soft and some very loud. You need to normalize the levels too.
Joe C
Joe C
See, that's your problem!
And iTunes allows you to tweak the relative volume and brightness/bass of each song individually. Runs on Windows.
I started out as you, and wound up having to manually label each of the MP3 files.
And iTunes allows you to tweak the relative volume and brightness/bass of each song individually. Runs on Windows.
I started out as you, and wound up having to manually label each of the MP3 files.
Last edited by Palmateer; Apr 29, 2010 at 07:23 AM.
I've listened to many different MP3 players, Ipods, etc-
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
If I'm going to listen to music in my car, especially in a Mustang with a Mach 460 / 1000 or Shaker 500 /1000 system I just don't think I could deal with sound quality below that of the original CD.
Is it possible to have original CD Sound Quality on an I-Pod, MP3, or Thumb Drive ??
If not, I'll be sticking with original CD's or burned copies.
Doug
Is it possible to have original CD Sound Quality on an I-Pod, MP3, or Thumb Drive ??
If not, I'll be sticking with original CD's or burned copies.
Doug
I ripped a bunch of stuff to a thumb drive from CDs at the highest quality the latest Windows Media Player let me, and I can't hear any difference in quality in the car. Also don't have any volume control issues. Things that were 'lower' volume on the CD (for instance, 'LaGrange' from ZZ Tops greatest hits is lower than anything else on that disc) are still lower... otherwise, no worries. FWIW...
I've listened to many different MP3 players, Ipods, etc-
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
They won't sound as good, and even worse depending on the bitrate quality and codec being used, which like I said above, most MP3s are now VariableBR or encoded at a lower than optimal rate. Average I see online are 192. 320 way better, lot bigger, but still lossfull. (CD audio is about 1400)
You need a lossless sound compression like FLAC, WMA lossless, Apple Lossless (ipod, MP4-v14+)
jocatch, you need to use better software for ripping and managing your MP3s. I like Media Monkey. It will find the title information for most CD's, you can have it "normalize" the volume, and it's easy to update information on the MP3's and organize them however you want. I'm sure there are lots of other programs that will do it, too.
Last edited by RandyW; Apr 29, 2010 at 08:15 AM.
Sorry if it seems like I'm bustin' yer chops, Lancel, but iTunes defaults to 128K. Mine is set to 256K VBR and the current version (9.1) tops out at 320 kbps. I've done rips at 320 before, but I generally don't see the point. I find 256K VBR to be plenty representative of the music content. And while eci can no doubt hear the difference between 256K VBR and lossless with the windows down at 80 MPH, I doubt the rest of us could.
But FYI, even at 320Kbs, you're losing quite a bit of information. CD are mastered at 1,411.2Kbs. Like I said, it's good to have a high-quality backup.
As others have said, I can really tell the difference on the home stereo (very efficient 3-way speakers), but in the car, just slightly.
For those who don't have original CDs (downloaded), I hope you have the MP3s backed up. Your hard drive WILL fail -- it's just a matter of when.
I've listened to many different MP3 players, Ipods, etc-
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
For some strange reason, they never sound as good a an original CD, or Ripped CD- I agree.
Through your earset though- they're great for example if you go to the gym, jogging, etc
Theres always some stupid reason- either formatting, volume control on the MP3 player, etc
It's not even that...
its the fact that everything is digital now, and because of that there will never be that 'needle on the record' re-creation of sound. As much as it would like to, nothing can replace the physical contact...
ECI probably has a turn-table installed in his GT500...
its the fact that everything is digital now, and because of that there will never be that 'needle on the record' re-creation of sound. As much as it would like to, nothing can replace the physical contact...
ECI probably has a turn-table installed in his GT500...

Ha... I actually rip all my Vinyl directly! Run my real turntables (not that cheap ION USB), Technics 1200s. Bring them in as CD audio... get that warmth of the vinyl.. .Crackles and all...
Yes, even there you loose alittle something, but the speakers in the cars don't recreate the full frequency range anyway... I did car audio install for years and while able to put together amazing sounds in a car, it was only "amazing for being in a car" was still a step behind a proper home system... Not a big deal since after years of being a DJ and audio installer, I think my ears are missing a few frequencies now too! Pity I'm only 30... and I will never get rid of vinyl, But for outside the home, CD is long done and digital media is the way to go.. carry 1,000+ "good sounding tunes" in your pocket can't be beat.
I would hope not many but FLAC would be a much better alternative. WAV doesn't do jack to compress, FLAC is lossless but still does compression. Trick is you'll be hard pressed to find a music player that supports FLAC, and FLAC is still a good chunk larger than a VBR-320 MP3.
If my Mustang or my phone ever supported FLAC, I'd upgrade my music quality, but until that day I'll have to stick to VBR-320 MP3s and the knowledge that I have the full lossless originals on safely kept CDs.
If my Mustang or my phone ever supported FLAC, I'd upgrade my music quality, but until that day I'll have to stick to VBR-320 MP3s and the knowledge that I have the full lossless originals on safely kept CDs.



