Fellow posters, this one will get you thinking! Believe me, I'm completely stumped...
Problem:
A friend has an old factory CD player in his car that dates back to '91, the good 'ole days for CD players. It has problems reading burned CDR's. It can read any CDR, but usually after Track 5, you cannot skip to other tracks. The laser loses its place (or so it seems like) and the CD continues to spin in spurts endlessly until you eject it and put it back in. Store bought CD's work without a hitch.
What He's Tried:
First impulse is that you think it's the media. Well, we've tried Sony, Imation, Maxell, Verbatim, Fujifilm, PNY, you name it. They all have different dye tints - green, blue, gold, and even silver.
- tried different burn speeds (1x, 2x, 8x, 16x)
- tried "track at once" and "disc at once"
- tried checking the option to "copy to Hard Drive" first under CD-to-CD copy
- have tried at least 5 different burners (Acer, Plextor, Samsung, HP, and Iomega)
- tried different software (Nero and Roxio)
Nothing seemed to make a difference. No matter what, after track 4 or 5, you could not skip to say track 10 without the problem occurring. We do realize that the CD player is part of the problem as old as it is. However, this next piece will really mess with you...
We're not trying to find a solution - we already have one. Want to know what resolves the problem? Ripping the tracks to either WAV or MP3 on the HD, then burning them to CD. What I want to know is why. Using various software that allows for CD-to-CD copy, there are options to copy to HD first. This option doesn't work. But if we manually go in and covert the tracks to WAV or MP3, then it works.
![[bugeyed] [bugeyed] [bugeyed]](/data/assets/smilies/bugeyed.gif)
It's driving me nutz! Does anyone out there understand why this conversion to WAV or MP3 makes a difference? What's different about converting the format before the burner actually writes the CD? Is it doing something extra to make it more efficient? Your thoughts/suggestions would be much appreciated...![[pipe] [pipe] [pipe]](/data/assets/smilies/pipe.gif)
~cdogg
"The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources."
- A. Einstein
Problem:
A friend has an old factory CD player in his car that dates back to '91, the good 'ole days for CD players. It has problems reading burned CDR's. It can read any CDR, but usually after Track 5, you cannot skip to other tracks. The laser loses its place (or so it seems like) and the CD continues to spin in spurts endlessly until you eject it and put it back in. Store bought CD's work without a hitch.
What He's Tried:
First impulse is that you think it's the media. Well, we've tried Sony, Imation, Maxell, Verbatim, Fujifilm, PNY, you name it. They all have different dye tints - green, blue, gold, and even silver.
- tried different burn speeds (1x, 2x, 8x, 16x)
- tried "track at once" and "disc at once"
- tried checking the option to "copy to Hard Drive" first under CD-to-CD copy
- have tried at least 5 different burners (Acer, Plextor, Samsung, HP, and Iomega)
- tried different software (Nero and Roxio)
Nothing seemed to make a difference. No matter what, after track 4 or 5, you could not skip to say track 10 without the problem occurring. We do realize that the CD player is part of the problem as old as it is. However, this next piece will really mess with you...
We're not trying to find a solution - we already have one. Want to know what resolves the problem? Ripping the tracks to either WAV or MP3 on the HD, then burning them to CD. What I want to know is why. Using various software that allows for CD-to-CD copy, there are options to copy to HD first. This option doesn't work. But if we manually go in and covert the tracks to WAV or MP3, then it works.
![[bugeyed] [bugeyed] [bugeyed]](/data/assets/smilies/bugeyed.gif)
It's driving me nutz! Does anyone out there understand why this conversion to WAV or MP3 makes a difference? What's different about converting the format before the burner actually writes the CD? Is it doing something extra to make it more efficient? Your thoughts/suggestions would be much appreciated...
![[pipe] [pipe] [pipe]](/data/assets/smilies/pipe.gif)
~cdogg
"The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources."
- A. Einstein