Unless I misread your sentence, you would have to keep two files in any case, even if you use another restoration software like iZotope RX. True, I keep the original, and the last ClickRepair run, I delete all the previous runs.I guess it depends on the person, many people doing record restoration directly record in WAV (or AIFF).Ok yes I encountered some when I made the tansition from JDK8 to 11, it lost the UI settings etc. Could you describe the issues with later revisions of the JDK? I use ClickRepair with JDK11 and even later on a laptop (I think it's 14) and didn't encounter any problems.That said, the ability to listen to the clicks being removed, and dynamically switch between listening to input and output is really useful. It writes a new output file every de-click run, so AFAIK if you want to keep the original rip, you've got to keep two files.It won't accept flac input, and most of my recordings are already in flac.It can be run with a modern JDK, but there are issues with the UI. It really needs to be run with JDK8 which is very old.I've had a couple of tries at click repair, and found it to be no better than VS and nowhere near as convenient to use. I use "VinylStudio" to rip and clean up the clicks and pops.
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