You can find more rips and uploads in my own archival thread (Thread 74501).
Comments and thanks are appreciated!
Copy/paste follows:
See Original Post (http://forums.ffshrine.org/f72/lossless-video-game-soundtrack-thread-links-first-64743/232.html#5798)
Nobuhide Isayama, Kohta Takahashi, Hiroshi Ohkubo, Tetsukazu Nakanishi
Ace Combat 2
FLAC (converted from original PlayStation streams*)
Download:
Part 1 (http://anonym.to/?http://www.megaupload.com/?d=CNW3E8VA)
Part 2 (http://anonym.to/?http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XV93RO7A)
[ pass: i4xsxu1t56r4yx ]
Track titles, ordering and specific composer info come from the great AC series resource Electrosphere (http://electrosphere.acecombatskies.com/). Gamerip track numbering and ordering have been updated since their initial posting and now follow the new OST tracklist (http://vgmdb.net/album/19523).
* Decoded from the game disc’s original XA streams with vgmstream’s test.exe, then re-encoded with FLAC. No quality is lost or gained during the conversion process.
These files play back at 37800 Hz, so transcoding these files to MP3 will either A) result in error or B) up- or down-convert to the nearest acceptable sample rate, 32 kHz or 44.1 kHz. If you absolutely need to preserve the original sample rate in a lossy format, you must use another format like Ogg Vorbis.

Nobuhide Isayama, Kohta Takahashi, Hiroshi Ohkubo, Tetsukazu Nakanishi
Ace Combat 2
FLAC (converted from original PlayStation streams*)
Download:
Part 1 (http://anonym.to/?http://www.megaupload.com/?d=CNW3E8VA)
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XV93RO7A]Part (http://anonym.to/?[url) 2[/url]
[ pass: i4xsxu1t56r4yx ]
Track titles, ordering and specific composer info come from the great AC series resource Electrosphere (http://electrosphere.acecombatskies.com/). Gamerip track numbering and ordering have been updated since their initial posting and now follow the new OST tracklist (http://vgmdb.net/album/19523).
* Decoded from the game disc’s original XA streams with vgmstream’s test.exe, then re-encoded with FLAC. No quality is lost or gained during the conversion process.
These files play back at 37800 Hz, so transcoding these files to MP3 will either A) result in error or B) up- or down-convert to the nearest acceptable sample rate, 32 kHz or 44.1 kHz. If you absolutely need to preserve the original sample rate in a lossy format, you must use another format like Ogg Vorbis.
Please Reupload. Thx.