The metadata is stored in the DSD-formatted layer on an SACD in a data ‘chunk’ seperate from the actual music data ‘chunk’. ![]() Anything that may also help others.Īnother related aspect to the SACD ripping process is metadata management. Any suggestions for improvement will be gratefully accepted. I’ve had the S5100 for a year or so but, so far, only ripped about a half-dozen SACDs so will readily admit that the above procedure isn’t perfect. If all is good, sacd_extract.exe will display the progress of the ripping process.At this point, POWER OFF the S5100 and remove the USB key and then click the Run button in the SACDExtractGUI or run sacd_extract.exe directly from a command prompt.All is good if the total time is displayed At this point you can open the tray, insert an SACD and close the tray. If the boot is successful, the S5100 should power off after it boots. Booting the S5100 to use as a ripper is fiddly.Ensure the SACD is loaded into the S5100 (the tray is closed) then click the ‘Run’ button in the ‘Output’ section of the SACDExtractGUI screen.Select the SACD tracks you wish to rip by entering track numbers into the ‘Select tracks (ex: 1,4,5)’ edit box in the ‘Processing’ section of the SACDExtractGUI screen.Create an output folder in, for example, the ‘Music’ folder and ‘add’ it using the ‘Browse’ button in the ‘Output’ section of the SACDExtractGUI screen.Power on the S5100 and check the connection from SACDExtractGUI.(brian.fitterman showed us above one way of finding the IP address) Alternatively and at least to begin with, run the SACDExtractGUI from the PC and set the S5100’s IP address.Being an old Windows user, I prefer to run the sacd_extract.exe program from a command-line Window (‘DOS prompt’) using the following command.A Java program called SACDExtractGUI is used as an interface to a command-line program called sacd_extract.exe which does the actual communication with the S5100.To boot from the USB key, insert the key when the S5100 is powered off. ![]() However, both wired and wireless are suitable for ripping The S5100 uses the 2.4GHz band for its wireless connection which I don’t normally use on my home wireless network.
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