![]() ![]() ![]() Foobar2000 will adjust the volume to 20dB more than the default target volume, or until the peaks are at maximum, whichever comes first. If you want to use old-school normalising so the audio peaks are at maximum, select the "prevent clipping according to the peak" option and set the pre-amp volume to +20dB. In the converter setup, when you enable the ReplayGain volume adjustment, there's a slider for adjusting the volume above or below the default target volume, should you desire a different volume. So if the result of a track scan is -4dB, it means the volume is 4dB above the target volume. The ReplayGain data saved to tags contains the peak level for each track and the volume of the track in relation to the target volume. It's a sound pressure level based on a SMPTE standard but it translates to -18dB on an output meter. 89dB is the ReplayGain default target volume. In the ReplayGain section of the converter configuration you can configure the volume. It's quite fast and supports all the common formats, including wave files. You first have to run a ReplayGain scan on the file and save the data. If you want to change the volume "on the fly", try foobar2000. I will experiment with your feedback on computer. I hope the experts who help people on this forum will take notice of your inputs. Of course it is nowhere near as common as FLAC and very few standalone devices can read it, but for archival purposes that's the best choice in my opinion. ![]() #Wav to flac converter mac plusPlus it has the option of preserving timestamps. Another advantage of Monkey's Audio is that the compression / decompression is 100% computationally lossless, meaning, when you compress a WAV file to APE and then decompress the APE file back to WAV, the new WAV file is strictly identical to the original (same size, matching MD5 or other checksum) do the same with FLAC and the new WAV file will be different (identical audio data but different metadata, you can't re-create the original if needed). Monkey's Audio (APE format) tends to yield a better compression ratio with the “normal” setting than even the highest FLAC settings, and tends to further compress significantly more with higher settings (I generally use “Extra high”). You can select different levels of compression, but since it's lossless compression anyway it won't change the outcome that much, in my experience very little extra compression is obtained beyond level 5. ![]()
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