EAC is easily configured to set up folders, but if you have a big
ripping task in front of you, I agree that dBpa's better metadata
sources alone make it worth the cost. 

MrSinatra;678724 Wrote: 
> EAC can be set to rip in different modes, like fast, burst, secure, etc.
> i believe the same is true of dbpa, and that would explain the rip
> times.  all either do is take the track to wav, where it is compared
> for accuraterip then compressed by your codec.
I haven't used EAC in 2-3 years, but I know the older versions would
only do one of the modes at a time. An advantage of dBpa is that it
rips in burst/fast mode, checks AccurateRip, and only goes back for a
2nd pass if it fails AccurateRip. Doing that kind of contingent ripping
with the older EAC required manual intervention. Does the current EAC do
it automatically? If not, that would explain some, but not all, of the
difference between 2 minutes in dBpa and 10-20 minutes with EAC, so
it's likely the OP also had something set incorrectly in EAC, such as
the drive offset.


-- 
aubuti
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