Ripping Sacd Work -

High-end players are becoming vintage, laser assemblies are being discontinued, and Sony’s once-strict DRM is finally a thing of the past. The solution? Ripping your SACDs to a hard drive.

If you are reading this, you likely own a shelf of those slightly thicker, shimmering jewel cases. You know the ones: Super Audio CDs (SACDs) . You bought them because they promised "studio master quality" and the death of "brickwalled" loudness wars. ripping sacd

Specifically, the (and similar "LibreDrive" compatible drives) can now read the SACD layer when flashed with custom firmware. High-end players are becoming vintage, laser assemblies are

Technically, circumventing DRM (the SACD watermarking system) violates the DMCA in the US. However, the legal consensus among archivists is if you own the original disc. No one has ever been sued for ripping their own SACD collection for personal use. Sony has largely abandoned the format, and enforcement is zero. But as always, keep your discs. The Verdict: Start Ripping If you have more than 50 SACDs, you are sitting on a time bomb. Do it now while the software is available and the hardware is findable. If you are reading this, you likely own