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Windows · Free
Exact Audio Copy 1.8
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Exact Audio Copy (eac)

What Is Exact Audio Copy (EAC)?

Exact Audio Copy (EAC) is a free Windows-based audio CD ripper designed to extract music from physical discs with near-perfect accuracy. The software prioritizes lossless copying through multiple error detection and correction mechanisms — including AccurateRip verification, C2 error correction, and jitter elimination — ensuring that digital copies match the original source material bit-for-bit. It's not a converter in the traditional sense; it's an extraction tool that reads CDs directly into lossless formats like WAV or FLAC, leaving encoding decisions to you afterward.

The application distinguishes itself through features absent from competitors. Secure mode reads each sector twice and compares the results. Offset correction compensates for drive-specific timing errors. Gap detection identifies silent sections between tracks. Drive cache overread prevents playback interruptions during extraction. These aren't marketing terms — they're actual verification layers that catch problems other rippers miss.

How to Use Exact Audio Copy for CD Ripping

Initial Setup and Configuration

Installing the software requires minimal configuration. After first launch, EAC prompts you to detect your disc drive and run an offset correction test — this benchmarks your drive's read characteristics against a database. The tool then automatically applies corrections during future rips.

The main window displays a track list once you load a CD. Metadata tagging happens automatically if the drive connects to online databases (like freedb or MusicBrainz). Unlike Format Factory or similar batch converters, this audio CD ripper focuses entirely on one disc at a time, which actually reduces the chance of processing errors.

Running a Rip Session

Select your tracks and choose your extraction method. Secure mode is slower but recommended for any disc showing playback issues. Test and copy mode runs a verification pass before final extraction — useful for scratched media. The software writes to your chosen format and location.

Converting CD tracks to FLAC format handles lossless audio storage natively. You can also output WAV files for maximum compatibility with other software.

Pro Tip: Enable "Use alternate read mode if available" in the Drive Options menu if you encounter read errors on specific discs. Many drives have a fallback mode that bypasses problematic firmware, and this hidden toggle forces the software to try it automatically.

AccurateRip: The Verification Layer

AccurateRip compares your ripped data against a community database of verified rips from the same CD pressing. When extraction completes, the software queries this database and reports whether your copy matches thousands of other users' extractions. A match confirms your drive extracted the data correctly; multiple matches mean near-absolute certainty.

This feature distinguishes exact audio copy (eac) from casual rippers. EZ CD Audio Converter lacks this verification system entirely, relying instead on basic error checking.

How It Stacks Against Competitors

FeatureExact Audio CopyEZ CD Audio ConverterFreemake Audio Converter
Secure mode extractionYesNoNo
AccurateRip supportYesNoNo
C2 error correctionYesNoNo
Batch processingNoYesYes
Built-in encodingNoYesYes
Windows 11 compatibleYesYesYes

The lossless audio ripper excels at accuracy but doesn't encode—it extracts. If you need MP3 conversion post-rip, Freemake Audio Converter for format flexibility handles that separately. This separation of concerns means fewer moving parts during the critical extraction phase.

When to Choose Exact Audio Copy

Use this software if you own physical media worth archiving properly or if your current ripper produces inconsistent results. The error detection overhead pays dividends on older, worn discs. Skip it if you only rip new, scratch-free albums occasionally or need integrated encoding pipelines.

EAC compatibility with current Windows versions remains solid across recent operating system releases, ensuring long-term usability.