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Mike Burger wrote:
>
>
>..I burned a couple of
Simon Mackay wrote:
>
> Why can't manufacturers work on car MD players that are designed like these
> earlier add-on CD and tape players. If they removed the tuner, they can sell
> these units for a lower price than the standard radio-MD units thar are sold
> nowadays. There are people out there
> > You need to convert your
> > audio files to *.cda (I think that's what it is) for CD players to
> > be able to read it.
>
> Nate, I'm not sure if that is accurate. I believe that a CD player
> can also read wave files (if they can't then the wave files are
> somehow automatically converted
On 6 Nov 2000, at 9:39, Les@musicmixers wrote:
> The most important factor to consider is the blank you use. Unlike
> MD, CDR media has a wide range of quality and not all will even be
> recognized in a picky cd player.
This cannot be stressed enough. Especially with CDRW's. And
just becaus
yea...like i said the media _OR_ the player...many consumer entertaintment
products...especially older ones dont have the laser that will recognize
cdr/cdrw but the newer ones do...tho one thing i noticed is that sometimes
blank audio cds are recognized but not at all times
> I don't think i
Nathan White wrote:
> You need to convert your
> audio files to *.cda (I think that's what it is) for CD players to be able
> to read it. That's probably why you can only play it in your cd-rom.
>
Nate, I'm not sure if that is accurate. I believe that a CD player can also
read wave files (if
I used to have the same burner but on IDE device. It works fine. I can burn
audio CD in 6X and playbale on home stereo.
If you are sick of buffer under, you can buy a TDK or Plextor burner that has
BURN-proof. No more buffer underrun.
What software you
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Hi
I have been into recording for a long time, and in a perfect setting =
with no burps of the software and with no quirks with the burner; speed =
should not matter much. In
That might sound dumb. But just want to make sure. You burn audio CD to CD-R
or CD-RW disc?
Mike Burger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't think it's necessarily a problem with either, to tell the
> truth...IU've had hte same thing happen with Verbati
The burner is a Ricoh 6200S, running on an Adaptec 2940U2W. The only
issue I've ever seen, really, is what I've described, when it comes to
this type of burn. Other than the obvious overrun/underrun which
occasionally happens, no matter what software/burner/interface, etc you
use, this is i
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EZ CD Creator 4.0 can actually support drag and
Jeanmougin schrieb:
> I tought that when you burnt a CDR at speeds over 1x or 2x, u had more
read
> errors.
Well, that would be a problem with the CD burner, not with the player.
If the burning device is of mediocre quality, or the media isn't all that,
chances of burn errors or poorly readabl
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I tought that when you burnt a CDR at speeds ov
Mike Burger wrote:
> The one thing that I didn't see noted, yet, is that if you're burning CDs
> for use in regular CD players, it doesn't matter how fast your burner can
> run...you still need to burn the CD at 1x for a regular CD player to read
> them.
You didn;t see that noted because it's h
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I don't think it's necessarily a problem with e
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The one thing that I didn't see noted, yet, is
On Mon, 6 Nov 2000, las wrote:
>
> "J. van de Griek" wrote:
>
> >
> > You didn;t see that noted because it's hogwash.
> >
> > Burn your audio CD's as fast as you want, your CD player will still play
> > them at 1x speed, since that's what it's designed to do.
> >
> > That's right. I wonder wh
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Wish I could concur...I have a Ricoh 2x burner,
* "J. Coon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on Mon, 06 Nov 2000
| Anyone know where to get a LiIOn battery for a Sony R30?
>From Sony.
If your local Sony service center does not have them the can order them.
Or you can order one yourself directly from Sony.
--
Rat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>\ Warning: pregnan
* "J. Coon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on Mon, 06 Nov 2000
| I think you are wrong on that.
He is wrong on that. I burn at 4x-8x and play on several different CD
players, no problems.
--
Rat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>\ Caution: Happy Fun Ball may suddenly
Minion of Nathan - Nathan says Hi! \ accelerate
It's digital. As long as there are ones and zeros to be read correctly,
it will work. If it keeps getting coasters at 6x, you have a problem.
If not, you are ok.
PrinceGaz wrote:
>
> I've finally replaced my Creative Labs CD burner with a drive which
> actually works, the Ricoh MP9060A which
On 6 Nov 2000, at 11:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I used to have the same burner but on IDE device. It works fine. I can
> burn audio CD in 6X and playbale on home stereo.
For the person who can't burn audio CDs... are you sure you are
burning them as CDDA, and not large AIFF or WAV files?
> Where I "got that one from" was experience...I burned
a couple of audio
> CDs (copying an audio CD in my CD-ROM drive to a CD-R
in my burner) at 2x
> (maximum speed of my burner), and my Pioneer 6-disc
changer in the next
> room could not play the CD. Any CD-ROM in the house
could (and
Anyone know where to get a LiIOn battery for a Sony R30?
--
Jim Coon
Not just another pretty mandolin picker.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If Gibson made cars, would they sound so sweet?
My first web page
http://www.tir.com/~liteways
---
THe sound quality will be the same. You aren't going to over drive
either one. Now if you wanted to crank the sucker up and shake the
windows and have the whole neighborhood on your neck it might be a
different story.
30 watts per channel will be a 3 db increase in the sound level... Or
just e
I use Easy CD Creator, and I have to decide if it will be a data CD or
an audio CD that will play on any Cd player before I start the
recording.
Mike Burger wrote:
> The procedure for copying my audio CDs is no different the than the
> procedure for burning my data CDs...copy the tracks from
THis is from another list but I thought people might be intersted in it.
David's Top Ten List "Why computer based burners are the only way to
go"
For starters it allows for more flexibility and options than just
plugging a
tape or record unit in the bac
Mike Burger wrote:
> The one thing that I didn't see noted, yet, is that if you're burning CDs
> for use in regular CD players, it doesn't matter how fast your burner can
> run...you still need to burn the CD at 1x for a regular CD player to read
> them.
I think you are wrong on that. Some of C
We've had a little bit of a similar discussion, in weeks past.
However...
On Sun, 5 Nov 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Aparently, there is yet another portable music player,
> Iomega's ZIP, just in time for the Christmas buying season.
> I've seen more TV ads for it in the past few day
> Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 14:34:35 +0100
> From: "J. van de Griek" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: MD: Speeding
>
> Mike Burger wrote:
>
> > The one thing that I didn't see noted, yet, is that if you're
> burning CDs
> > for use in regular CD players, it doesn't matter how fast your
> burner can
Mike Burger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Where I "got that one from" was experience...I burned a couple of
>audio CDs (copying an audio CD in my CD-ROM drive to a CD-R in my
>burner) at 2x (maximum speed of my burner), and my Pioneer 6-disc
>changer in the next room could not play the CD. Any C
That is more like due to a problem in the media or the player not the
burner...
Btw, I am new to the list...just saying "Sup!?!" :)
- Original Message -
From: "Mike Burger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 06, 2000 9:10 AM
Subje
I don't think it matters on how fast you burn the CD. If you want your audio
CD to be playable by other stereo or boombox, you will have to choose the
option "close disc" in your CD burning software. If you don't close the disc,
you can make changes but o
Jeanmougin wrote:
> I tought that when you burnt a CDR at speeds over 1x or 2x, u had more read
> errors.
Not if your equipment can handle the speed.
Larry
>
>
-
To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
"J. van de Griek" wrote:
>
> You didn;t see that noted because it's hogwash.
>
> Burn your audio CD's as fast as you want, your CD player will still play
> them at 1x speed, since that's what it's designed to do.
>
> That's right. I wonder where Mike got that one from? I think that he has
> ei
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Aparently, there
Aparently, there is yet another portable music player,
Iomega's ZIP, just in time for the Christmas buying season.
I've seen more TV ads for it in the past few days than I've
seen for minidisc in *years*. The ad points out the high
cost of solid state media, although the ZIP media is still
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