I think Sox is the best option available today.I have a few old 80's CDs with pre-emphasis, but it is not commonly used anymore.Here is what I would do if I still had unripped pre-emphasized CDs:- Rip to single wav file & cue sheet.- Process the wav with Sox.- Mount the "wav + cue" disc image with Daemon Tools, Virtual Clone Drive or some other virtual CD drive emulator.- Rip the virtual disc to track files with MC.Some old links:http://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php?topic=26276.0http://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php?topic=45366.0http://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php?topic=40270.msg274867#msg274867
I wrote a little guide over at head-fi on how to do de-emphasis when ripping a CD: Ripping CDs that have pre-emphasisYou may find it helpful. The process is a little bit messy. You need to run a command line program, manually edit a text file, juggle files around. That can be a bit daunting if you aren't familiar with using command line programs. The guide mentions using Foobar to split the CUE into tracks. You can do the same in Media Center. Load the CUE in Media Center and it can split it and convert the tracks to FLAC or MP3.