nmw01223 Posted February 1, 2014 Posted February 1, 2014 I backup my (old) vinyl records to CD - they last longer. I do this by recording each side with Audacity, spliting into tracks, saving each as a WAV file, creating a CUE file and burning with ImgBurn. So far, so good. The problem comes with live albums where the tracks are continuous - no gaps. I've read in the forum that audio CDs are split into frames of approximately 1/75 second, and if ImgBurn is writing a track, it will pad with 0s to the end of the last frame, if necessary. So, even with pre-gap set to 0 seconds, there will be a silence of up to 1/75 second between tracks. Obvious answer is to make sure the tracks are integer multiples of the frame length. However, I can find no easy way of ensuring this with Audacity / ImgBurn. Whilst I realise this is not an ImgBurn issue per se, I am wondering if anyone has a simple method of doing this. Alternatively, a good start would be if someone could say how many (44,100Hz) samples there are in an audio CD frame, then I can probably manage it.
spinningwheel Posted February 1, 2014 Posted February 1, 2014 Moved to chat since there is no ImgBurn issue here.
LIGHTNING UK! Posted February 2, 2014 Posted February 2, 2014 You'd have to save as one long file and not split the tracks up if you don't want any digital silence (potentially being) added. You are just talking about a maximum of 1/75 of a second though (that's what 1 sector is... or 2352 bytes if you prefer it that way). Would you really notice it? Maybe... maybe not.
gottogo99 Posted February 14, 2014 Posted February 14, 2014 CD Wave will split on sector boundaries perfectly after you save each LP side as one large file: http://www.milosoftware.com/en/index.php?body=cdwave.php. Works perfectly for live albums w/no gaps.
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