![]() ![]() Then I've found some weird things like unsplitted flac files with 24bits/44.1kHz when their log file say it should be 16/44.1 (I understand that for torrenting pourposes you can just transcode to flac without any harm, but then you have to do it properly, some people use weird things or apply dither like with audacity without knowing). Yes, the major selling point about WAVs is not the WAV itself but the log file that should come with it, so at least I could see how was it ripped (some people just abuse burst mode on scratched CD's you know). PS: Should I repost this in r/trackers or am I probably getting ignored there? This is my first ever post so I will gladly format or modify it if its needed. Plus if it is really that worth to go across all that or its just easier to get into one of the said trackers. I can't seem to find any FAQ in their website, so I'm asking here wondering if there is any user of said site to enlight me about how it currently works. The price is not a big deal (privacy in a chinese site on the other hand is, provided I wont be using a vpn since nobody gets DCMA'd in my country), but looks like there is some virtual currency for every single download later on, or maybe I'm just getting it wrong?. Afaik if you donate 8$ you can gain access to almost all their content. Chinese can be partially solved with google translate, BUT, looks like there is some sort of paywall. I'm afraid joining (assuming I can manage to, since I don't own a seedbox, and do not plan to ever buy one) Jpopsuki, animebytes or RED will end up with the same outcome, and U2 is plain impossible to me. ![]() wav files that I can verify as much as I want to trust their flacs. Managed to enter Bakabt last week, but besides beeing a really nice tracker I could not find there what I was looking for, i.e. In my extensive research I've found some private trackers that could solve it. And this is where all messes up and public sites/trackers are no longer sufficient. I'm fully aware of transcodes, bad rips and bad splits (looking at you, Medieval cue splitter), so right now I'm loking for wav files with their respective cue and log files. However, in the past year I started to care more about the source of said music. This used to be enough as I could find flacs for almost every relevant show or at least mp3 320kbps for the less popular ones. Like most people, I've always downloaded anime music from nyaa (or Hikari no Akari-like sites).
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