"for a disk that is in good condition that will happen rarely during the playing of a disk, and not at all in many or most cases."
Probably one explanation for why I can't hear a difference in most cases. The eror correction built into CD redbook format is fairly good it seems, but of course there is always a threshold in regards to disk quality and mechanical/optical reader performance/reliability in practice that could make a difference.
It still seems to me that Bit-perfect ripping does provide the best case scenario for reliably getting the data off the optical disk as best as possible still though I would say in that the need to read data in real time with a certain minimum throughput (in lieu of buffering) is a constraint with playing a CD that does not exist with ripping.
THere is still lots that can go wrong downstream from there in regards to jitter in particular even with a practically bit perfect ripped .wav file. More so in general perhaps in the case of FLAC which is lossless but compressed and requires more processing in the D2A conversion process.
Probably one explanation for why I can't hear a difference in most cases. The eror correction built into CD redbook format is fairly good it seems, but of course there is always a threshold in regards to disk quality and mechanical/optical reader performance/reliability in practice that could make a difference.
It still seems to me that Bit-perfect ripping does provide the best case scenario for reliably getting the data off the optical disk as best as possible still though I would say in that the need to read data in real time with a certain minimum throughput (in lieu of buffering) is a constraint with playing a CD that does not exist with ripping.
THere is still lots that can go wrong downstream from there in regards to jitter in particular even with a practically bit perfect ripped .wav file. More so in general perhaps in the case of FLAC which is lossless but compressed and requires more processing in the D2A conversion process.