Is there any explanation you could provide for this? Bit perfect and lossless rips shoulnd't/couldn't be distinguishable wouldn't they?
Seems very peculiar that the Bot would use any other software process than any of the other competitors, like XLD or dBpoweramp provided one uses the correct settings of course. But i suppose that goes for the BOT itself as well.
Im a bit in limbo as to how this could be possible.
Marius, I have no idea as to the reason different source drives yielded different sounding rips. But clearly they did. Another example of audio theory not lining up with observation, as we've so often seen (until we figure out the right things to measure). Bear with my long-winded story...
I must admit, I became quite OCD about this observation a few years back when I decided to convert all my silver discs to digital files. I wanted the best "archival" quality possible, so that I could rip once, and never look back, frankly planning to get rid of my CDs. I did an experiment using 3 different drives (an internal Blu-Ray drive in my Dell PC, an external Panasonic USB bus-powered DVD Read/Write drive, and a DC-powered Plextor external DVD Drive), each ripping 3 familiar tracks from 3 different CDs using DB Poweramp, and Windows Media Player. I selected one track from a old classical Deutsche Gramophone CD that suffered from CD digititis, another from a "high-end" Reference Recordings disc, and the third from a very listenable rock album. All ripped to WAV, stored on my PC hard-drive and later transferred to USB-flash for playback on my then-new BDP-2. (18 files total)
My wife played back the 18 files, in random fashion, "blinded" for me and my 2 sons (25, 28 y/o). We rated each file for 4 simple qualities (high frequency edginess, low frequency solidity, 3-D depth, plus overall "nicest sound")
Consistently, the files created by the Plextor were the best, the internal Blu-Ray drive scored second, and the external DVD-Rom the worst. This last drive was really quite bad - lifeless, dull, flat. The rips were all "bit-perfect" as displayed by dB Poweramp.
So, I began the arduous task of ripping everything through my Plextor - until the drive died. The drive had been discontinued, and I stopped ripping altogether. That is, until the BOT came around. The files created on the BOT sound better than even those done on the Plextor. Both flac, and now wav. WAV sounds a bit better than flac, but not enough to re-rip the 200 or so discs I've already ripped since I got the BOT.
Although the difference between source drives was clearly noticeable through my main system, it might not be significant enough to notice, or certainly to lose sleep over for many. But I felt it was important enough given my goal of creating a "permanent" archive. Frankly, not knowing what the BOT could do, I would have been happy living with the rips from the $50 Plextor if it hadn't died.
YMMV, but gas is cheap