High Vinny,
It is neither.
The CD rom drive in your computer, burns CD's differently then the way a 
commercial CD burner.
The CD rom drive in your computer, only changes the collars of the CD.
While the CD burners that professional people use, punches holes in the 
layers of the CD.
You may also want to keep in mind, some older CD players don't play CDR's.
This really has nothing to  do with bit rates.
Hope this helps.
My best regards.
  John.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Vinny Samarco" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 31, 2008 9:46 AM
Subject: A Question about Differences in the responses of cd players.


> Hi,
>    I have a bit of a dilemma.  A local restaurant wants to play cds of my
> musical group as  background music.  These would be sold to the public 
> also.
> Their system (I don't know what kind it is) won't play the cds at all, it
> could be as old as fifteen years, and it might be older.  Yet, the cds 
> will
> play on any other unit, in a car, or portable unit that we have tried. 
> This
> large player in the restaurant easily plays commercially made disks.  I
> recorded them using Goldwave  at 44100 using.wave files, of course.
> I have made the master cds using Premier Cd recorder.
>    Could their be varying bit rates that I am not aware of, or some 
> setting
> in the premier cd recorder or Goldwave. that I might need to alter so 
> these
> will play on an older machine?
>    By the way, I don't understand anything about bit rates and why any
> other machine but this older large commercial unit
> won't play these particular disks.
> Thanks for help and suggestions.
> Vinny Samarco
>
>
>
> Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
> http://www.pc-audio.org
>
> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 



Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
http://www.pc-audio.org

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to