| Forum Home | ||||
| Press F1 | ||||
| Thread ID: 135521 | 2013-11-13 04:52:00 | Copying mp3 to cda and playing the audio CD | Knownothing (7989) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1359635 | 2013-11-13 04:52:00 | When I copy some mp3s, and convert them, on the fly to cdas and burn the cdas to a CD, why wont the CD play in some vehicle CD players? Tia |
Knownothing (7989) | ||
| 1359636 | 2013-11-13 05:01:00 | What type of CD's are you using ? Are you finalizing the CD's as well ? Most programs that make a Audio CD will automatically close the CD, simply burning the tracks doesn't always work. Some players can be fussy , don't use CD-RW, most fail, generally a CD-R works OK, some players don't like the CD +R either. |
wainuitech (129) | ||
| 1359637 | 2013-11-14 06:26:00 | Thanks for your quick response I am using Dick Smith CD-R inkjet printable disks. Nero 7.9 software to burn them which I think finalizes them. |
Knownothing (7989) | ||
| 1359638 | 2013-11-14 07:06:00 | How old are the players that the discs won't play in? Some of the older players will only play discs that have been burnt at the lowest speed possible so you might like to try reducing the burn speed. | FoxyMX (5) | ||
| 1359639 | 2013-11-14 07:12:00 | Thanks for your quick response I am using Dick Smith CD-R inkjet printable disks. Nero 7.9 software to burn them which I think finalizes them. Try some non printable CD-R's. In the past I've had "weird" results sometimes with printable CD's, mainly with data. It may or may be the cause, only way to find out is test, they are cheap enough these days. |
wainuitech (129) | ||
| 1359640 | 2013-11-14 07:32:00 | also some only like to play 600mb/650mb disks. most/all disks these days are bigger than the official standard. some players are more strict at adhering to the standards than others. also there is the tolerance factor. players are made to be withen certain tolance and the same with disks. however if the disk is at one end of the tolerance and the player is at the other, it can be just out enough to stop it playing. |
tweak'e (69) | ||
| 1359641 | 2013-11-14 07:37:00 | @FoxyMX I have wondered about the age of the players too! I think they are in vehicles aged about 2000. Sorry I don't know any more than that. They play fine in my wife's CD player which was bought in 2006. I have burnt them at the slowest I can with my Asus writer and Nero 7.9 at x12 @wainuitech I hadn't thought of that. I will try some over the weekend. |
Knownothing (7989) | ||
| 1359642 | 2013-11-14 08:07:00 | Just a thought, it may be the way Nero is burning as well. You can use Windows Media Player to burn a Audio CD or many other free burning software. | wainuitech (129) | ||
| 1359643 | 2013-11-14 09:02:00 | Burn it slower on higher quality media. Try 8x if your burner allows you to go that slow, same for the media. | Chilling_Silence (9) | ||
| 1359644 | 2013-11-14 17:56:00 | Try the suggestions here but it may just be the player is not compatible with burnt CD's. There was a time when finding something that would reliably play them was difficult and it's possible you've encountered one that doesn't. So, try a different brand of disc (verbatim has always been good for me), try a different program to burn with, and try a different speed if you can, try burning on another machine if you can. Failing all that blame it on the player and give up. |
dugimodo (138) | ||
| 1 2 | |||||