On Wednesday 15 Jan 2003 11:49 am, John Richard Smith wrote:
> Josenildo Marques wrote:
> >Any audio cd I try to copy with xcdroast goes wrong.
>
> you are writing audio mp3 to disc ?
>
> >I also tried to encode
> >the audio cd files into wav files with cdda2wav, but the problem persists.
>
> So you were writing mp3 audio files to disc, but now you cannot convert
> them all to wav files,
> sounds as though there is a problem with the original mp3 files.
>
> > It
> >is said there is a kind of mismatch because the program cannot read all
> > the tracks.
>
> If you had been writing wav files to disc and not mp3 my previous comments
> would of been applicable plus many audio wav file cd's have video files
> which xcdroast/cdrecord cannot handle, but this is not the case.
>
> Sounds(excuse the pun) like you original mp3 sound files are suspect in
> some way that xcdroast/cdparanoia/cdrecord has found wanting, you can lower
> the quality test some with command line options in cdparanoia/cdrecord but
> maybe you are not happy with the command line.I'm not too sure myself
> without some practice.
>
> John

I've only been vaguely following this, so sorry if these comments have already 
been covered.  In my experience, two points come up that could be at issue.  
First, if the source is not impeccable you are likely to get a faulty read.  
Second, the burn speed is fairly important.  Assuming there is no possible 
problem with the first (and if xcdroast took a long time to read any tract 
you can guarantee there is a problem there), have you tried burning at slower 
speed?

Anne
-- 
Registered Linux User No.293302


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com

Reply via email to