Hola Jose,

You will need to contact the makers of Windows Foobar and Free Encoder Pack for 
answers regarding the performance of their software. Many times, software based 
on flac uses old releases, or forces certain options. The flac developers have 
no control over how third-party tools use the core features.

If you were to instead install the official flac command-line tool, then you 
would be able to guarantee that quality will be preserved when converting FLAC 
to WAV. In fact, there is a checksum in FLAC that can be used to ensure that 
the output WAV audio matches the original audio (whether the audio came from 
AIFF or WAV originally, the checksum is for the audio content only, so it works 
with all formats when uncompressing). Since flac does not support changing bit 
depth or adding dither, these are not a concern when using the flac command 
line.

Brian Willoughby


On Apr 18, 2023, at 9:47 AM, Jose Baulenasr <josebaulenasric...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
> My name is Jose and I live in Buenos Aires - Argentina.
> Dear friends, it's good to be able to contact you, please I hope you can help 
> me...
> 
> I have a question and it is the following:
> 
> When passing a FLAC to WAV; in my case using in Windows Foobar 1.6.16 and 
> with components in their latest versions installed, such as Free Encoder Pack 
> 2022-11-30, as long as the Bits per Sample are not modified, and everything 
> is left automatic, using these settings - Output Bith Dept - AUTO - and 
> Dither - NEVER -, does the WAV resulting from the conversion lose quality?
> 
> Thank you in advance for your future responses.
> 
> Jose.

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