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Who was it that ripped the DVD audio from the Manilla DVD?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 12:56 am
by brywool
Is there an easy way to do this where it doesn't rip into one long wav file?

Re: Who was it that ripped the DVD audio from the Manilla DV

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 12:57 am
by Behshad
brywool wrote:Is there an easy way to do this where it doesn't rip into one long wav file?


Rip Rokken ! :lol:

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 1:03 am
by brywool
nah! though, I'm sure he did too...

I'm just looking for a simple way to do this where I won't end up cutting up the wav file. That takes forever...

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 1:03 am
by Behshad
The best program that Ive came across is Corel DVD Copy 6.
Check out the bay :wink:

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 1:15 am
by kgdjpubs
I used a program called DVD Audio Extractor. Search for it, it's free for a 30-day trial. Only "problem" is that it appears the chapter breaks in the dvd are about 5-10 seconds AFTER the song starts. Not a big deal really. Just make sure that when you burn the cd that you tell the burning program eliminate the 2 second gap of silence that most audio burning software programs automatically insert at track breaks.

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 1:27 am
by brywool
kgdjpubs wrote:I used a program called DVD Audio Extractor. Search for it, it's free for a 30-day trial. Only "problem" is that it appears the chapter breaks in the dvd are about 5-10 seconds AFTER the song starts. Not a big deal really. Just make sure that when you burn the cd that you tell the burning program eliminate the 2 second gap of silence that most audio burning software programs automatically insert at track breaks.


Cool, thanks! I've been editing super long wav files of shows and it's just way too long a process.

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 1:13 pm
by Carlitto H@kk
I did this with FairUse Wizard (ripped a massive WAV file) then
used Audacity to add some gain and cut it up to individual
tracks. Once the WAV was ripped, the Audacity stuff took me
about an hour. Pretty easy stuff and both prgrams are freeware
with NO time trials.

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 7:55 pm
by xfactor
Try DVDVideoSoft.

PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:13 am
by brywool
Carlitto H@kk wrote:I did this with FairUse Wizard (ripped a massive WAV file) then
used Audacity to add some gain and cut it up to individual
tracks. Once the WAV was ripped, the Audacity stuff took me
about an hour. Pretty easy stuff and both prgrams are freeware
with NO time trials.


Yeah, I use Audacity all the time. I've got Cakewalk too, but that program, while it has a ton of promise, can be the most frustrating software in the world.

PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 2:11 am
by Abitaman
I use magix's Audio Cleaning lab for everything.
Record the file or import
To cut large files into smaller
To clean up files, sound, vocals, put mono into stereo or surrond sound.
i have used several, and this the easiest and fastest, plus one of the cheapest on the market.

PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 2:19 am
by brywool
Abitaman wrote:I use magix's Audio Cleaning lab for everything.
Record the file or download.
To cut large files into smaller
To clean up files, sound, vocals, put mono into stereo or surrond sound.
i have used several, and this the easiest and fastest, plus one of the cheapest on the market.


Rather than cutting each portion and saving it as a file, it's better (for me) to mark it and then burn the cd with track marks. That way, you're not saving a bazillion files, it's just one. This is if you have one long audio file. Soundforge works great for this. For the DVD, the shareware that was suggested above worked great too and saved the tracks as separate files.

PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 4:35 am
by Abitaman
brywool wrote:
Abitaman wrote:I use magix's Audio Cleaning lab for everything.
Record the file or download.
To cut large files into smaller
To clean up files, sound, vocals, put mono into stereo or surrond sound.
i have used several, and this the easiest and fastest, plus one of the cheapest on the market.


Rather than cutting each portion and saving it as a file, it's better (for me) to mark it and then burn the cd with track marks. That way, you're not saving a bazillion files, it's just one. This is if you have one long audio file. Soundforge works great for this. For the DVD, the shareware that was suggested above worked great too and saved the tracks as separate files.


that is what I usaully do if burning a cd, then rip back to computer, but if not burning cd I save each track.