scottm_dj Posted October 6, 2017 Share Posted October 6, 2017 Holy #^%$...this really does work on my Cambridge 752BD! You guys are absolute geniuses! Now I can add content to my superb ExaSound e28 i got from Larry via this site. Siltech817 1 Link to comment
One and a half Posted October 6, 2017 Share Posted October 6, 2017 7 hours ago, scottm_dj said: Holy #^%$...this really does work on my Cambridge 752BD! You guys are absolute geniuses! Now I can add content to my superb ExaSound e28 i got from Larry via this site. Congratulations! DFF/DSF's will sound great on the e28 Why people with Cambridge Players can rip SACD with minimal effort & support, yet those with Oppo struggle? AS Profile Equipment List Say NO to MQA Link to comment
Popular Post CatManDo Posted October 6, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted October 6, 2017 1 hour ago, One and a half said: Why people with Cambridge Players can rip SACD with minimal effort & support, yet those with Oppo struggle? It has nothing to do with the player. The Cambridge is a rebranded/modded Oppo. Most people struggle because of the network configuration or the required files on the USB stick and on the PC. Those are general IT problems, not SACD ripping problems. JediJoker, captainbrent, chichaz and 1 other 3 1 Claude Link to comment
Fitzcaraldo215 Posted October 6, 2017 Share Posted October 6, 2017 8 hours ago, One and a half said: Congratulations! DFF/DSF's will sound great on the e28 Why people with Cambridge Players can rip SACD with minimal effort & support, yet those with Oppo struggle? No struggłe for me on an Oppo 103. It worked within minutes. captainbrent 1 Link to comment
Jeremy Anderson Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 Does anyone know which MT chip is in the Pioneer bdp-150? (most importantly, is it compatible)? (I ask because those can sometimes be found under $50. Would be sweet if they were useful as a ripper...) Link to comment
marslo Posted October 11, 2017 Share Posted October 11, 2017 I purchased my BDP 160 for 80 $ or so , works flawlessly. Aurender W20 -> AudioAero La Fontaine, Lampizator Pacific SE->Ayon Crossfire III or Circle Labs A100 >Avantgarde Acoustic Trio LE 26 with 4x REL Carbon Special Link to comment
Listen Up Posted October 17, 2017 Share Posted October 17, 2017 A HUGE THANK YOU to ted_b and everyone who made this possible! I'm an pretty average computer user, and was able to follow Haggis999's instructions that ted_b linked to on the first page of the thread. It didn't work the first time on my Oppo 103, but when I tried a different USB key it was exactly as described. I have now ripped all my SACDs in stereo (thats all I can play at the moment) and am re-ripping them in multichannel for the future. The only disc that didn't work was Mendelssohn Piano Trios (Pentatone). I haven't followed up on that yet. Yeah! Link to comment
Popular Post tonyo123 Posted October 21, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted October 21, 2017 All, I eagerly read about this and took the plunge on the Pioneer from Accessories4Less (great price and prompt free 2 day delivery). Spent quite a while last night trying to get this to work. The menus were a little different on the Pioneer player than some of the step by steps I read, but, close enough that I eventually figured it out. I spent a lot of time trying to diagnose why while I could ping and telnet to the IP and port, I could not get the ripping file or sacd2dsd gui to recognize the address (same lib...IP:port address error) . Even though the IP addresses are dynamically assigned by my router, once I eventually followed the detailed instructions and turned off the dynamic IP on the Pioneer player (thought it zeroed out the IP) and ensured the USB drive with requisite files was in the Pioneer, then using the same IP address that still showed up in the network, these steps seemed to do the trick. So, basically, followed the player prep instructions, inserted the USB with the Pioneer 160 files (mine is the 80 US model), then ran the sacd2dsdgui executable. Voila. Literally, I almost cried with happiness when I saw the ripping start (but, have not gotten over Sony selling me the SACD format, then abandoning the format, then holding the music hostage). Also, with all the Metadata included in both ISOs and .dsfs. Now, my SACD collection in the attached jpg is unleashed!!! These will be ripped and played back through Foobar2000. So, as soon as the Windows Fall update completes (1709), I have many busy weekends to get this done. I want to thank all of you for the comments, insights, and especially to those developers and tinkerers who figured this out then made it public to benefit owners of jailed SACDs like me. I want to offer Sony, the one finger salute. I still can't get over it. Thanks, thanks, thanks. kumakuma, Siltech817 and Marcin_gps 2 1 tonyo123 Link to comment
Popular Post petefang Posted October 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted October 22, 2017 Bought an almost-new Pioneer BDP-160 and it works flawlessly! Ripped two SACD discs today from the MacOS end using ISO2DSD and it went smoothly! Now I am enjoying the files on my portable player driving the Focal Utopia. PF Siltech817 and tonyo123 2 Link to comment
djoel Posted October 22, 2017 Share Posted October 22, 2017 How much for the David Elias The WIndow, J/K! Link to comment
HiRezGuy Posted October 27, 2017 Share Posted October 27, 2017 @ted_b: Thanks for making the Pioneer process list a sticky. If it is easier for you to maintain that doc in the context of this thread, say as much in a post, and I'll delete the dbox link. There may be a spelling error or two in the text file at the dbox link, btw. ---------------------------------------- Here are a couple of caveats that I have run into with "sacd_extract.exe". Nothing major at all - nothing that affects operation or processing of SACDs and DSF/DFF files. 1. I mentioned the "Dacapo-Kronos-Holmgreen" SACD in the Pioneer process list; it was an SACD that did not have any metadata for "sacd_extract.exe" to use. See the attached dsf extraction log at the dbox link for the same SACD. Notice the lack of newlines in the status messages. The program is probably outputing a null instead of a newline for those SACDs that do not have metadata included. This is the only SACD I have that does not have metadata, so I cannot confirm the behaviour otherwise. What I can say is this: all other SACDs that I have processed with "sacd_extract.exe" have output status messages terminated by a newline. Definitely not a biggie. 2. Some SACDs are multiple SACD sets. Consider a 2 SACD-hybrid set that contains both stereo and mch audio, but uses defaults for "Sequence Number" and "Set Size" via the SACD metadata. If I run "sacd_extract.exe" in dsf extraction mode, I should end up with four folders, assuming you run stereo extraction first, then mch extraction, for each SACD consecutively: 1. sacd1 stereo; 2. sacd1 mch; 3. sacd2 stereo; 4. sacd2 mch. The first created folder will be named based on the SACD title from its metadata, and subsequent folders have the same basename with a numbered suffix. (This is similar to what is described in the Pioneer process list.) I have a 2-SACD set, "DG-Boulez-BPO-Ravel-Bolero". This SACD causes "sacd_extract.exe" to put all stereo and mch files for both SACDs in the same folder; "sacd_extract.exe" does not create the four folders as I described above - it uses only one folder thereby overwriting previously generated files. This is the only SACD I have where the SACD metadata contains valid values for "Sequence Number" and "Set Size". It's a pretty good feature - "sacd_extract.exe" sees that a set is multi-disc, and then leaves the files in the same folder. The problem is twofold: 1. As I mentioned above, subsequent dsf extractions overwrite previously generated dsf files (since "sacd_extract.exe" is using the same folder to write output); 2. No "Sequence Number" is prefixed to generated dsf files, so you end up with 2 track 1s, 2 track 2s, etc., for a 2-SACD set. Definitely not a biggie. The work-around is to: run "sacd_extract.exe" against the SACD1 iso image for stereo tracks; rename the output folder; run "sacd_extract.exe" against the SACD1 iso image for mch tracks; rename the output folder; repeat the same steps for SACD2; and finally, merge the folders so that there is one stereo folder and one mch folder, each with SACD1 and SACD2 files. ---------------------------------------- I put the logs at the following dbox link for: 1. the "Dacapo-Kronos-Holmgreen" SACD; 2. another 2-SACD set I have ("CCS-BFO-Fischer-MAHLER-2") that uses default values for "Sequence Number" and "Set Size"; and 3. the logs for the "DG-Boulez-BPO-Ravel-Bolero" 2-SACD set. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ph2v415w8c06zad/sacd_extract.exe---logs.rar?dl=1 Link to comment
Jake Trapp Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 I've been using this in Linux without issue to rip my SACDs from my Oppo. It's worked great. I'm having unrelated problems with that workstation, so I set this up on my Win 7 box. I was able to rip to ISO without issue, but every time I tried to convert to DSF files, iso2dsd would start, "print" the contents correctly, create the destination folder and cue sheet, and then just hang at the first file conversion. I tried SACD_extract from the command line on the ISO file, and it just crashes. After a couple of hours trying to figure out what the problem is, I finally got the brilliant idea to try an SACD I had ripped before. Grrrr.... no problem. The problem disc is Arabella Steinbacher's new release of Britten/Hindemith violin concertos, on Pentatone. I've ripped all my Pentatone discs in the past without issues. In fact, this is the first disc I've every had any problem with. Any ideas what the problem might be? It plays fine, and I ripped it to flac with JRiver. I tried stereo and multi-channel. As I said, it looks like I can rip the ISO just fine (file size makes sense; I've never figured out how to play SACD ISO files in JRiver), just can't convert to .dsf. Link to comment
audiventory Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 1 hour ago, Jake Trapp said: just can't convert to .dsf. 1. How you convert in DSF? 2. What happens when you convert to DSF? AuI ConverteR 48x44 - HD audio converter/optimizer for DAC of high resolution files ISO, DSF, DFF (1-bit/D64/128/256/512/1024), wav, flac, aiff, alac, safe CD ripper to PCM/DSF, Seamless Album Conversion, AIFF, WAV, FLAC, DSF metadata editor, Mac & WindowsOffline conversion save energy and nature Link to comment
Synfreak Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 4 hours ago, Jake Trapp said: ... The problem disc is Arabella Steinbacher's new release of Britten/Hindemith violin concertos, on Pentatone. ... There were similar problems with other Pentatone SACDs in the past, so most likely you have the same problem here: a. The Meta-Data used on the SACD uses some special characters which can not be processed by SACD_extract - and it crashes. b. The SACD Meta-Data contains some very long file/tracknames whhich can not be handled by Windows - you can try to extract from/to the root of your drive (i.e. "C:/ " - and no subfolders used). There is a batch file for these rare conditions to be used with sacd_extract - you can drop me a PM if you want to try it. JediJoker 1 Esoterc SA-60 / Foobar2000 -> Mytek Stereo 192 DSD / Audio-GD NFB 28.38 -> MEG RL922K / AKG K500 / AKG K1000 / Audioquest Nighthawk / OPPO PM-2 / Sennheiser HD800 / Sennheiser Surrounder / Sony MA900 / STAX SR-303+SRM-323II Link to comment
audiventory Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 41 minutes ago, Synfreak said: a. The Meta-Data used on the SACD uses some special characters which can not be processed by SACD_extract - and it crashes. b. The SACD Meta-Data contains some very long file/tracknames whhich can not be handled by Windows - you can try to extract from/to the root of your drive (i.e. "C:/ " - and no subfolders used). All these issues may be solved by special automation under track extraction: 1. As rule, non-English symbols may be kept in file and directory name. 2. Forbidden (for operation system) symbols are replaced to allowed. 3. Track path and name length must be reduced. It is issue of both: Mac and Windows. Also some ISO's may be truncated. I suspect it is file system issue. May be it is ripping tool issue. Still I don't have information enough. In this case sacd_extract can hungs up at certain percentage. Automation software what control sacd_extract should be able to terminate it manually. That truncated ISO may have 2 track variants: stereo and multichannel. If sacd_extract hanging at one of the variants, need to try extract other variant. Read more about ISO extraction faults > AuI ConverteR 48x44 - HD audio converter/optimizer for DAC of high resolution files ISO, DSF, DFF (1-bit/D64/128/256/512/1024), wav, flac, aiff, alac, safe CD ripper to PCM/DSF, Seamless Album Conversion, AIFF, WAV, FLAC, DSF metadata editor, Mac & WindowsOffline conversion save energy and nature Link to comment
jf1 Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 6 hours ago, Synfreak said: There were similar problems with other Pentatone SACDs in the past, so most likely you have the same problem here: a. The Meta-Data used on the SACD uses some special characters which can not be processed by SACD_extract - and it crashes. b. The SACD Meta-Data contains some very long file/tracknames whhich can not be handled by Windows - you can try to extract from/to the root of your drive (i.e. "C:/ " - and no subfolders used). There is a batch file for these rare conditions to be used with sacd_extract - you can drop me a PM if you want to try it. Yes, the Pentatone Alan Civil Mozart Horn Concerto SACD is the only one I have had a problem with on my Oppo 105. SACD_Extract produces an ISO, but ISO2DSD gets stuck, producing a CUE file but nothing else. Link to comment
Jake Trapp Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 Thanks a lot for the responses. I really appreciate it. I did see the previous posts regarding path length, but the original path length didn't seem that long to me. Shows you what I know - once I moved everything to the root directory as recommended, it works fine now. Thanks again. Link to comment
haggis999 Posted October 28, 2017 Share Posted October 28, 2017 1 hour ago, Jake Trapp said: Thanks a lot for the responses. I really appreciate it. I did see the previous posts regarding path length, but the original path length didn't seem that long to me. Shows you what I know - once I moved everything to the root directory as recommended, it works fine now. I've just taken the hint and underlined the guidance about path lengths in my Oppo-oriented guidance document linked on p1 of this thread. MikeyFresh 1 Link to comment
jf1 Posted October 29, 2017 Share Posted October 29, 2017 18 hours ago, jf1 said: Yes, the Pentatone Alan Civil Mozart Horn Concerto SACD i Doh, file name length issue. Moved SACD_extract to C:\SX and it now produces DSF files. One trap I have run into trying to follow the instructions at the start of this post is ensuring you have the right version of SACD_extract. However I initially downloaded it, I had an old version that I was using to extract ISOs, even though ISO2DSD comes with a more recent one. Now I have 0.3.8. Link to comment
emthered Posted November 2, 2017 Share Posted November 2, 2017 Just thought I'd share an exciting discovery here. Apologies in advance for the length of this post but I feel that this is very important and relevant to this thread. I was one of those unlucky ones who had a Pioneer BDP-80FD that would not read SACDs. The display would read "CD" when SACDs where inserted and therefore sacd_extract would not work properly. I've always been a tinkerer and decided I wouldn't give up. After some extensive research I discovered that the BDP-160, BDP-170 and BDP-80FD are all essentially the same unit. The BDP-160 is marketed in Europe, U.K., Taiwan, Asean, Oceana, Russia and China. The BDP-170 is marketed in Russia and Oceana and the BDP-80FD in North America. I deduced the most likely problem with detecting the SACD must be in the laser/loading unit (Pioneer refers to this as the "Loader Assembly"). I was able to source a replacement part from a Chinese supplier on Ebay by searching for "BDP-160 laser". Sure enough I found a new one for $23 USD shipped. I figured $23 was a worthy gamble. I received the part about three weeks later. Replacing the part is fairly easy. While the unit is powered on, open the tray and remove the tray's faceplate by pushing it upwards and away from tray and set it aside. Close the tray. Turn off and unplug the unit. Remove the six screws that hold the case lid and remove it and set it aside. Remove 2 ribbon cables and 1 molex connector from the main board. These three connections are attached to the Loader Assembly. Remove the Loader Assembly by removing the 4 silver screws that hold it to the chassis. There is a black plastic disc cover piece that is attached by clips to the top of the assembly - carefully remove it by unclipping and lifting upward. Once the Loader Assembly is removed pull the tray open by pressing sideways on the white plastic bar underneath the unit. This motion will retract the laser assembly and allow you to slide the tray to the outward position exposing the 4 screws you'll need to remove to extract the laser carriage. Before you remove the laser carriage undo the 2 ribbon cables. Once the ribbon cables are removed you can unscrew the laser carriage from the Loader Assembly. Remove the 4 rubber damping grommets from the old laser and put them on the new one and screw the new laser carriage into the Loader Assembly. Carefully re-attach the 2 ribbon cables. Now here's the most important step. This will not work if you don't do this! There is a special barcode on a sticker placed on the bottom of the laser carriage. This barcode must be scanned in order to decipher a special 64-digit code. The barcode is in "Data Matrix" format so you'll need to download a barcode scanning app on your phone that will read "Data Matrix" barcodes. There are many free apps available for Android and iOS that can do this. Once you scan the code your scanning app should show a 64-digit alpha-numeric code. CAREFULLY write this code down and set it aside. Apparently this barcode is used by the main board for properly aligning and calibrating the laser. At this point you can re-assemble everything in reverse order. Be careful when replacing the ribbon cables to the main board as any misalignment may cause problems. On your computer create a .TXT file (I used notepad on a PC) and carefully type in your 64-digit code. Any typing errors will result in this not working so take your time! Save the file on the root of a USB drive as "2D_barcode_data.txt". Place the USB drive in the USB slot of the re-assembled BDP-80FD and power on. Also make sure the unit is attached to a monitor. Upon boot-up use the remote to navigate to "Initial Setup" and press "enter" on the remote. Now press the following numbers on the remote to get into the service mode screen - "5 1 7 7". The monitor screen will change to a service mode menu. Select "[6]Repair Service" then select "Write 2D barcode from USB memory" and press the enter button on the remote. With any luck the message "OK" will appear on the screen. Quit the service mode by pressing the "stop" button on the remote. Note that you can also enter the barcode using the remote alone but it's a lot more cumbersome. PROBLEM FIXED! I can't describe how excited I was when I inserted a SACD and the unit's readout showed "SACD". Sacd_extract now works flawlessly every time. Disclaimer - at the time of this writing I can only find one supplier of this part and this particular supplier has only one unit left. Your results may vary. The official part number is KEM-480AAA. Best of luck! JediJoker 1 Link to comment
CatManDo Posted November 2, 2017 Share Posted November 2, 2017 39 minutes ago, emthered said: After some extensive research I discovered that the BDP-160, BDP-170 and BDP-80FD are all essentially the same unit. The BDP-160 is marketed in Europe, U.K., Taiwan, Asean, Oceana, Russia and China. The BDP-170 is marketed in Russia and Oceana and the BDP-80FD in North America. Thanks for your great instruction in how to make the Pioneer recognize SACDs again. My Pioneer BDP-170 hasn't had this problem yet fortunately, only a couple of hybrid SACDs that got recognized as CDs first, but as SACDs when reloaded. I had to replace the laser on my Sony SCD-XA777ES for the same reason, and the replacement drive got the same problems after a while. It's a well known problem for Sony players of a certain generation. But now, as I rip all my SACDs, this doesn't matter anymore. Concerning the text above that I quoted, while the BDP-80FD is indeed the US version of the BDP-170 (they have a common service manual), both the BDP-160 and 170 were sold in Europe. The 160 was entered on Amazon.de as of June 2013, and the successor BDP-170 as of May 2014. There must be some technical differences. Quote The BDP-170 is Pioneer’s latest Blu-ray player, the replacement for 2013’s BDP-160 and the only new model it’s launched this year. Pioneer says this new player improves on its predecessor’s AV performance while adding new smartphone connectivity options. http://www.trustedreviews.com/reviews/pioneer-bdp-170 JediJoker 1 Claude Link to comment
Guest Mook Posted November 4, 2017 Share Posted November 4, 2017 My turn to try and get some help. Pioneer 80FD I've d/l'd the autoscript for the Pioneer 160. Prepped two different USB thumb drives as FAT32. Copied the script folder to the root of the thumb drives. Follow the instructions on the initial post. Put the thumb drives in the power-off 80FD. Powered it up. The tray will not open with either thumb drive. I can "see" the Pioneer on the network and ping it but all is worthless if can't get the tray to open. Anyone have any ideas? I'd go into more detail but searching the thread and time have me worn out. Hopefully I get some ideas of what to try next. Dave- Link to comment
Popular Post tonyo123 Posted November 4, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted November 4, 2017 A couple of points: 1) did you follow the specific 'Pioneer Elite BDP-80FD Setup for SACD Ripping' prepping instructions for the BDP160? This needs to be step by step. I tried a few times and realized afterward I was skipping a step or two that I thought weren't needed, but they were. See below. 2) did you download and use the script from the file: 'SACD-extract-BDP160.zip'? I did a check and yes the tray does open up. When I turn on the Pioneer it's display shoes: Pinorre' Hello', No Disc, then 'USB In' and the Tray opens. Here's the specifica Pioneer directions and with thanks to our forum member HiRezGuy who created them and to ted_b for having them on his dropbox. By the way, I am prepping with this scrip (through strep G), then jumping over to iso2dsd_gui to rip one disc after another (no need to open any command prompts - just make sure you put in your player's local IP address and port xx.xxx.xxx.xxx:2002 - ip address can be seen on properties for the player in the networking window) . It really improves the automation (process, options, and production time). *************************************** Pioneer Elite BDP-80FD Setup for SACD Ripping --------------------------------------------- A. Under the Pioneer Elite BDP-80FD setup screen, disable auto-play and auto-resume functionality. B. Under the BDP-80FD setup screen, use WPS to securely connect to WiFi. C. Under the BDP-80FD setup screen, disable dynamic IP addresses. D. Power off the BDP-80FD. E. Disconnect all USB devices from the BDP-80FD. Windows Environment Setup for SACD Ripping ------------------------------------------ F. Format a USB drive with a FAT32 file system. If the drive has a label, it should be no more than 8 characters. G. Use the AutoScript folder from SACD-extract-BDP160.zip; copy the AutoScript folder from the zip archive to the root of the FAT32 formatted USB drive. The AutoScript folder from the zip archive contains three files (Autoscript; Autoscript.TSS; sacd_extract_160 -- two files have no file extensions). No other files or folders should be on the USB drive. H. Create a local folder on root of the Windows PC. Use a very short folder name. NOTE: The short folder name helps to avoid SACD iso file naming issues; iso's are named based on embedded SACD artist and title metadata, which can be very long. I. Use the "sacd_extract.exe" executable from sacd_extract_0.3.8_WIN32.zip; place the executable in the local folder created in step H. NOTE: The "sacd_extract.exe" executable can be placed anywhere in the system PATH, and executed without an absolute PATH. When placed in the system system PATH, the folder created in step H simply becomes a working folder on the root of the drive. J. Under Settings>Network & Internet>Sharing Options, ensure that "Network Discovery" is enabled. K. Open Network (Network Neighborhood) to ensure that the BDP-80FD is visible. SACD Ripping ------------ 1. Place the FAT32 USB drive in the front USB slot of the powered-off BDP-80FD. 2. Power on the BDP-80FD. The front tray should open. 3. Insert an SACD. The BDP-80FD display should show that a SACD has been inserted. 4. Open a command prompt on the Windows PC. 5. Change directory to the local folder created in step H. 6. Open Windows Network and right-click the BDP-80FD icon. Note the IP address of the player. 7. Execute the following command, using the IP address from step 6 without leading zeros. .\sacd_extract -i {BDP_IP_ADDRESS}:2002 -P -I e.g.: .\sacd_extract -i 192.342.1.217:2002 -P -I NOTE: Do not use the absolute path to the command if the "sacd_extract.exe" has been installed under the system path. 8. An SACD iso image with a name based on the SACD artist and title metadata will be created in the local folder created in step H. NOTE: Some SACDs do not have any artist/title metadata included, mostly due to a production oversight (e.g., Dacapo Kronos Holmgreen). In this case, "sacd_extract.exe" uses "Unknown Artist". Any string after the -I can be used to set the output SACD iso image name, but the string should be surrounded by double-quotes if the string contains spaces. 9. Use a batch script and "sacd_extract.exe" to convert the created SACD iso image to Sony DSF files. "sacd_extract.exe" will leave DSF files in folders named based on the SACD artist/title metadata. "sacd_extract.exe" uses the same folder for stereo and multi-channel output, and does not use the SACD metadata for "Sequence Number" or "Set Size" when processing multi-disc sets. NOTE: The approach I use is to rip a batch of SACDs to iso, then run "sacd_extract.exe" from a batch script to convert everything to 2ch dsf files. I then use the same script to go back and query all iso's to see which have mch audio, and then those with mch audio get processed again to create mch dsf files. Since dsf files are created in the same folder based on the SACD metadata, I prefix stereo files and multi-channel files with a descriptive token so that they have unique names. When processing multi-disc sets, I use a disc number prefix token to keep files organized. In general, because "sacd_extract.exe" uses a processing folder based on SACD metadata, I create a temporary folder where "sacd_extract.exe" does its work, and then I can process the created folder for each SACD without actually knowing the folder name beforehand. ================================================================================ ================================================================================ The Autoscript folder contains three files (two files have no file extensions). Use the files specific to Pioneer BDPs, which are contained in archive SACD-extract-BDP160.zip. Autoscript Autoscript.TSS sacd_extract_160 Use the most current version of sacd_extract.exe. (Note: In 03/2017, the current version was 0.3.8_WIN32.) ================================================================================ ================================================================================ Usage: sacd_extract [options] [outfile] (v0.3.8_win32) -2, --2ch-tracks : Export two channel tracks (default) -m, --mch-tracks : Export multi-channel tracks -e, --output-dsdiff-em : output as Philips DSDIFF (Edit Master) file -p, --output-dsdiff : output as Philips DSDIFF file -s, --output-dsf : output as Sony DSF file -t, --select-track : only output selected track(s) (ex. -t 1,5,13) -I, --output-iso : output as RAW ISO -c, --convert-dst : convert DST to DSD -C, --export-cue : Export a CUE Sheet -i, --input[=FILE] : set source and determine if "iso" image, device or server (ex. -i 192.168.1.10:2002) -P, --print : display disc and track information Help options: -?, --help : Show this help message --usage : Display brief usage message A couple of points: 1) did you follow the specific instructions for the BDP160? They are below. This needs to be step by step. I tried a few times and realized afterward I was skipping a step or two that I thought weren't needed, but they were. PS...I am copying because the files is in dropbox of one of our forum members and these things can change over time, 2) did you download and use the script from the file: 'SACD-extract-BDP160.zip'? I did a check and yes the tray does open up. When I turn on the Pioneer it's display shoes: Pinorre' Hello', No Disc, then 'USB In' and the Tray opens. Here's the spcifica Pioneer directions and with thanks to our forum membert who created thes MikeyFresh and JediJoker 1 1 tonyo123 Link to comment
Guest Mook Posted November 4, 2017 Share Posted November 4, 2017 Tonyo, thanks for your reply. I am trying to do this via Ethernet not Wi-Fi. I did look at my wi-fi option and WPS is not one of my selections. The only choices are WPA and WEP. I have disabled autoplay in setup, There is no autoresume that I can find. I'm on my third USB thumbdrive and still no luck. I'm using the same instructions you've put into your post. When I fornat the USB drive there are options for "Allocation File Size". These are: Default Allocation Size 4096 bytes 8192 bytes 16 kilobytes 32 kilobytes 64 kilobyes I'm not sure these have an impact but it is possible, It's also possible there's a setting on the Pioneer that's not correct. When I power up the USB stick does flash and the Pioneer create a folder called "BUDA" on the thumbdrive. I'm not sure what that means or does. When I power up I see in the display: PIONEER HELLO NO DISC USB IN NO DISC The unit does nothing after that. I have the proper files in the Autoscript folder: AutoScript AutoScript.TSS sacd_extract_160 There is also a hidden folder: System Volume Information I'm using Win 10 Pro 64 bit. I'm stumped. Dave- Link to comment
Guest Mook Posted November 4, 2017 Share Posted November 4, 2017 Holy crap! I tried wi-fi and the tray opened. Now I'm ripping my first SACD. Wi-fi is the key but may I be so humble to ask is there a way to do this via ethernet? This will take forever via my crappy wi-fi service, (0.1 MB/sec) After 20 minutes I'm 6 percent done. Thanks for the help, tonyo and to those I PM'd earlier in this process. Dave- Link to comment
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