Thanks for your reply, but it was still hard for me to believe that drives made little difference, so I ran a test. I recorded the same audio file (Minnesota Orchestra's recording of Respighi's Belkis, Queen of Sheba, track two) twice using different file names and the "secure" option on both: one on a heavy duty external Plextor drive with lots of software tools to check its accuracy, and the other on a very flimsy drive on a laptop which didn't cost much more than the Plextor drive. In both cases, I used an 8x max speed. I could tell no difference listening to the two sets of tracks, but I hoped for more confirmation, so I imported both tracks into an audio analyzer, GoldWave. I zoomed out till I got a simple sound wave and the two files still looked identical. Then I took snaps of both tracks into Photoshop, removed the dark blue background and printed out the two sets of tracks (each lasting a split second). When I held the two images up to the light, they were not just approximately equal, they were exactly equal--no deviation at all anywhere in the track, absolutely none. Very impressive indeed. I am still going to use my Plextor drive to rip CDs, but my little test at least suggests that the secure mode of ripping in MC is really accurate.