What are My Options for Ripping My CD Collection ?


I'm not a tech person and I'm looking for options to rip my 1,300 CD collection.  I've been looking at a used Innuos Zen Mk 3 with internal CD ripper because it would also be a considerable streamer upgrade.  However this is $1500 or more on the used market.  I can live with my current streamer if there are less expensive options for ripping with comparable sound quality (FLAC or better).  We are MAC based. Thanks.  

 

 

 

foamcutter

I used a service = https://dmp3digital.com/

They will rip to anything you want and in any format. For my time/effort of my 600+ CDs = worth it. Their service also came with a complete catalog of my music & they cleaned any disc that was difficult to rip. I bought two Samsung 870 EVO 4TB SSD SATA 2.5” drives, as these were compatible with my Aurender N20. Lesson learned = format the drives first using the Aurender beforehand.


Comparing the same tracts via CD, SACD, ripped storage, streaming, all analog on my turntable, and even U-Tube music is an interesting exercise...for me & in my system it really comes down to the quality of the original recording. A bad recording and poor studio mix – sounds subpar in any format. Even on You-tube there are some great & well-made tracts  = the two Steve Windwood acoustic tracts released 3 yrs ago are great examples:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eoSn2Y-b6wI&list=RDeoSn2Y-b6wI&start_radio=1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXDcPoeIx-E

I ripped 500 plus during covid. I bought a fast cd player for my macbook air.  Cut ripping time by more than half over Apple’s basic unit.  Well worth the money. 

I ripped 500 plus during covid. I bought a fast cd player for my macbook air.  Cut ripping time by more than half over Apple’s basic unit.  Well worth the money. 

I ripped my collection of 4000+ CDs using dB Poweramp on Windows. The program is also available for Mac. Here is why I did it this way:

  • I use a high end DAP when I travel or when I listen to music when I go to bed. I wanted the files to be available when and where there is no internet.
  • I will keep my CDs until I die. When I'm using my main system I prefer physical media. Call me a Troglodyte.
  • dB Poweramp gives you the option of ripping to uncompressed FLAC. This is the best file format you can have because there is no compression. If I was going to spend the hundreds of hours ripping my CDs I never wanted to feel like I ripped them in a compromised format.
  • If you use an external drive like a Plextor in an outboard case that can rip at very high speed it cuts your ripping time by 70% or more. It took me three years to rip my collection even using a high speed drive.
  • dB Poweramp automatically fetches the meta data and puts everything together in the music folder for each album. It also checks for an accurate rip by comparing your rip against its database.
  • The program also lets you add data such as categories so you can group your music if you prefer.
  • You can set up your computer and drive on a small table next to your listening chair and rip CDs while listening to your system.

If you are going to get rid of your CDs after you rip them then the only reason you would need the files is if you expect to listen to them offline. Otherwise I'm not sure it would be worth the trouble.
 

+1 @ghdprentice I ripped and ripped (during Covid) and Qobuz has ‘em anyway. Ripping takes a great deal of time too.