I'm new to burning optical media. Instead of going for an expansion bay unit, I got a lacie external firewire burner last fall which contains a liteon mechanism. The audio disks it produces under the latest and greatest itunes and panther skip in my car player when I hit a bump in the road or the bass player starts ripping. Commercial disks do not. Am recommending that itunes burn at the slowest speed possible, and, since it takes a while I am assuming it is.

This unit shipped with Toast lite, which seems to produce more reliable disks when slow burns (1x,2x,4x) are selected. Is this possible or is it just a figment of my imagination? All lacie support will tell me is to use toast.

Is the quality of the blank media to blame? Have seen some discussion regarding durability/reliability of optical media in this forum.

In general, should the audio disks produced by a burner be on par with commercial audio CDs?

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