I'm running into an ironic problem where my newer, faster system is making it MORE difficult to rip slightly damaged CDs. I believe that this is due to the fact that even though the new system is using the same drive (transferred over from the previous system), it's a much faster processor, and it's therefore able to process the data faster and keep the disc spinning much faster, which means that when it runs into a part of the disc that's difficult to read, it goes through all 16 tries (I always use "Secure Rip") before the disc has had time to slow down sufficiently.
With the older system -- which used the same CD/DVD drive -- my ripping speeds were not as fast, and when a rip report came up with errors, I would run it again, and the disc would not spin as fast on the second try. This slower rip would almost always be able to read the "problem" sections with no retries. Now, with the same drive in the new system, the speed is staying much higher, and the "second pass" is still quite fast. This results in only "slightly" better results on the second pass.
Is there any way to address this? The read speed setting in MC has never had any effect on any of the drives I've used (Plextor and Pioneer), so I'm stuck with having to try an entire other system to get a rip with zero errors. Is this something that can possibly be addressed with modern drives in fast, modern systems? It seems like a lot of drives these days do not respond to software speed settings. Given this, is there any possibility of MC adding some feature that could alleviate this issue? I'm seeing a higher incidence of ripping errors on the new system, which as I said is the same drive from the previous system. The only difference is that the rest of the system is a LOT faster, and it's ironic that the faster overall speed is making it MORE difficult to get error-free rips.
Thanks for any feedback on this,
Larry