On Tuesday, 6 January 2026 17:14:24 Greenwich Mean Time Alan Mackenzie 
wrote:
> Hello, Michael.
> 
> Good news!
> 
> On Sun, Jan 04, 2026 at 19:18:11 +0000, Michael wrote:
> 
> [ .... ]
> 
> > Whenever the head moves along the track to a new position, the
> > reading/ caching/verification/error correction process starts
> > again.  Therefore I expect the same problem would manifest.
> > 
> > I haven't used xine for decades now, because it had become
> > temperamental at the time - but if it works then at least xine
> > offers a workaround.  Please post back if/when you crack this
> > problem - I'd be interested to know how you fixed it.  :-)
> 
> xine turned out to be less perfect a player than I thought.  Between
> the tracks, it has a short gap of audio output, perhaps 0.05 second
> or 0.1 second.  I found this a little disturbing whilst listening to
> Steve Reich's Music for 18 Musicians, an hour long continuous piece
> of music with 14 "tracks" (which I heartily recommend).
> 
> The problem turned out to be a defective SATA socket on the
> motherboard. When I moved the plug to a different socket, I got
> perfect playback from deadbeef.  :-)  This was with the new DVD
> drive, and new SATA data cable too.
> 
> This was after having swapped my "new" PC's original DVD drive into my
> old PC, which gave perfect sound there, showing for sure it wasn't
> the drive (or the replacement I bought).
> 
> This is all yet one more reason why I don't recommend MSI
> motherboards. I don't intend to buy another one.

I'm glad you got this annoying problem resolved.  It reminds me of a 
Compaq MoBo I had causing a SATA HDD to produce a worrying tick-tick-
tick sound.  I thought the drive was on its way out, but it was nothing 
of the sort.  I just had to reseat the SATA connector on the MoBo and 
the noise went away.  It made me feel nostalgic of the old PATA 
connectors, which were rather more robust.  :-)

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