LAME 3.90 vs. LAME 3.97
Reply #5 – 2007-02-27 18:35:26
I remember gameplaya using 3.93.1 at low bitrate and a discussion about his setting which was a little strange to many members including me. I was concerned about version difference towards 3.90 then and IIRC 3.93.1 is pretty much the same as 3.90.3, and using CBR320, there shouldn't be a remarkable difference. However with CBR320 there aren't essential differences anyway between the Lame versions. As a consequence I wouldn't change 3.93.1 against 3.97. If I would change at all (no real need to) I'd change to 3.98. It's on alpha11, but has improvements over 3.97 already. Be careful with the version history. You never know for a fix towards what it applies as usually there's no reference to it. If you take all the fixes after a certain version it does not mean that these fixes apply to a problem that existed in this particular version. IIRC there have been some problems introduced in version around 3.94, and you will read about fixes concerning this. Sure these fixes don't affect 3.93 or 3.90 behavior. It's up to you but using CBR320 is not wise to use for most members here. mp3 quality is so high with a lower quality setting that you don't really benefit from that. In the rare cases where quality suffers at a moderately lower setting (pre-echo samples) you will not get a really better quality using CBR320. Try eig to hear for yourself. If you use ABR (a less popular vbr method than VBR which according to experience is more robust) at high bitrate, for instance --alt-preset 270, you can expect the same quality in practice. 270 kbps is already very high and offers a big safety margin, and you can go quite a bit lower without really sacrificing quality. I used EAC as a free ripper before I switched to current great dBpoweramp. You can cofigure EAC to work with any CLI encoder and thus with any Lame version. Current dBpoweramp isn't free but is not very expensive IMO, and I absolutely love it's way of ripping. Secure and usually fast. If you can afford it I'd buy and use it. I personally don't rip and encode in one step but encode the wavs to ape and mp3 (or whatever I like) using foobar. If necessary I also do some wav editing before (clueing together tracks from a live CD for instance, or do some fading in and out).