![]() cue file.then go back into EAC to split the big wav file, and then to flac? Why? Why on earth would you rip an album to flac (which actually means you ripped to wav and then ran it through a flac encoder).as one big file.then convert that back to wav.then manually edit a. cue splitter (EAC really isn't really, either).but either will will rip your files properly in the first place if you set them up right. Why all those time-consuming steps? Why not just rip to separate files in the first place? Either EAC or dBp can do this perfectly.in a single step. :smile2: Why? Why on earth would you rip an album to flac (which actually means you ripped to wav and then ran it through a flac encoder).as one big file.then convert that back to wav.then manually edit a. I should mention that the original Big FLAC and CUE files were created using EAC with no-gaps enabled.Ĭheers. Step 7: Use dbPoweramp to convert WAV files into FLAC files. ![]() Step 5: EAC will ask you for the CUE file to open. Step 4: EAC will ask you for the xxxxxxxxx.wav file location to open. ![]() Step 3: Open EAC and goto Tools -> Split WAV By CUE Sheet -> Leave Out Gaps Step 2: Edit the cue file and replace the xxxxxxxxxx.flac name to xxxxxxxxxx.wav. Step 1: Use dbPoweramp to convert the Big FLAC to a Really Big WAV (uncompressed/lossless) I use both dbPoweramp and EAC as follows:
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