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CD recorders
"Informer" wrote in news:401a0b14$0$13352
: "Bruce Tyler" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 20:32:41 -0000, "Informer" Ok this is what I do. Insert CD into writer, click on Nero Express, select music then audio CD, I then select the tracks. Tracks are shown as Window Media Player series 9 files within the Nero Express window. The tracks are uploaded where I then insert a blank CDR. I then select the burn speed and off I go. Some burns are fine but others have the odd track that sounds like the volume has been turned up too far on a cheap portable radio and gives slight distortion at upper frequencies that can only be heard on a decent Hi-Fi system. In the last recording I did I used Window Media Player to store the tracks on the hard drive first and copied off the hard drive to Nero Express. This was the worst recording so far but I don't know if it would have recorded better if I copied straight off the CD. All music is taken from the original CD's Thanks everyone for your comments. To extract tracks from the original CD, use EAC. www.exactaudiocopy.de Extract UNcompressed. Then fire up Nero to burn if you like. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
CD recorders
In article ,
Informer wrote: I have been burning music CD's on my computer but get distortion on the odd track at high frequencies. You're not using a 'normalize' feature in your software, are you? I've copied hundreds of CDs on my old Acorn and they all sound exactly like the original - except for the very rare one which doesn't work at all - due I'd guess to a faulty blank. I don't see how you can get HF distortion in if you're staying in digits and not altering the file. -- *'Progress' and 'Change' are not synonyms. Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
CD recorders
On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 07:43:57 -0000, "Informer"
wrote: "Bruce Tyler" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 20:32:41 -0000, "Informer" Ok this is what I do. Insert CD into writer, click on Nero Express, select music then audio CD, I then select the tracks. Tracks are shown as Window Media Player series 9 files within the Nero Express window. The tracks are uploaded where I then insert a blank CDR. I then select the burn speed and off I go. Some burns are fine but others have the odd track that sounds like the volume has been turned up too far on a cheap portable radio and gives slight distortion at upper frequencies that can only be heard on a decent Hi-Fi system. In the last recording I did I used Window Media Player to store the tracks on the hard drive first and copied off the hard drive to Nero Express. This was the worst recording so far but I don't know if it would have recorded better if I copied straight off the CD. All music is taken from the original CD's On that basis, the previous poster who stated "Learn to make better recordings then..." was probably correct ... One other factor: what media are you using? Its *possible* that your CD player may be struggling to get accurate audio data from some of the media you're using. It is, in my experience, unusual to hit the fairly small area in which a disc plays without skipping or major audio artifacts but has a noticable degradation in the sound ... it is possible, though. You might want to try some tests by burning onto different media, using identical source material, software, settings, process, etc., and see if there's any audible difference in the results ... As at least one other poster has responded, though, the first thing you need to do is acquire a copy of EAC (which will cost you nothing more than the suggestion to send a postcard to its author!) and use that instead of WMP for audio extraction. HTH Julian -- Julian Fowler julian (at) bellevue-barn (dot) org (dot) uk |
CD recorders
"the dead comedian" wrote in message
Buying a stand alone recorder drastically simplified the transferring of vinyl & tapes to CD. Yes, it simplifies out of existence many important capabilities described below. I use audio CD-RWs when I need to do some editing on the computer. If I want to make a duplicate CD, I use the high speed sync-recording. I've never had a problem with these dubbed copies, but I still wouldn't use them to burn discs I'm sending in a trade. It also saves time, since I don't have to rip all the tracks to the HD first or accidentally burn the disc TAO. The author is solving a non-existent problem. I copy audio CDs routinely on my PC. It's a total no-brainer. I click an icon, load the discs, click a button and the copy happens automatically and properly. The software (EZ CD 5 or 6 or Nero) does the rest. I believe in specialization. My television set is the best way to watch TV, my stereo is the best way to listen to music, and my laptop is the best way to surf the web/email/type a document/use a spreadsheet. Jack of all trades, master of none. So speaks the voice of mediocrity and inflexibility. You can't do as good of a job transcribing other media to CD on stand-alone equipment as you can do on a PC. For openers, name a CD recorder with the flexible tic and pop reduction of a PC. Name one that lets you change the loudness of a song after you've recorded it, but before you burn the CD. Name one that lets you edit lead-in noise as accurately and precisely. The statement "My television set is the best way to watch TV" ignores the popularity and power of the Home Theater PC. The statement "My stereo is the best way to listen to music" ignores the popularity of PCs as music players with vast music libraries. |
CD recorders
"Informer" wrote in message
System: Rotel RA-02 amplifier, Rotel RCD-02 CD player, Quad 11L speakers, Pioneer DVD 5100H hard drive/ DVD recorder. I have been burning music CD's on my computer but get distortion on the odd track at high frequencies. How does it feel to be the modern equivalent of the villiage idiot? Literally millions of people burn CDs on their computer without encountering this kind of problem. Some of these people are literally kids. I have tried burning at various speeds and using various makes of discs but get no improvement. I have now decided to buy a purpose built stand-alone hi-fi CD copier and wonder if anyone has used them. Given the 100's of entirely adequate copies of CDs that I've made with a PC, I can't imagine why a person would do it any other way unless extremely high volumes were needed, and you wanted to burn many copies at a time. |
CD recorders
In article ,
the dead comedian wrote: I believe in specialization. My television set is the best way to watch TV, my stereo is the best way to listen to music, and my laptop is the best way to surf the web/email/type a document/use a spreadsheet. Jack of all trades, master of none. If you think your TV is the best way to watch a TV picture, you've never seen the results the system is capable of. TV sets are consumer goods built down to a price, with all the compromises that entails. Also, why use a grotty little laptop when a desktop is so much superior in every way - apart from portability? -- *When cheese gets it's picture taken, what does it say? Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
CD recorders
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Informer" wrote in message Given the 100's of entirely adequate copies of CDs that I've made with a PC, I can't imagine why a person would do it any other way unless extremely high volumes were needed, and you wanted to burn many copies at a time. Convenience largely. If you're just sitting there listening to music and think 'mmm, copy of that would be nice', you just press a couple of buttons and it's done. I can use a computer up to 18 hours a day for work related stuff, and while I (too) *can* use it to copy cds, I find a standalone 'hifi' recorder does what I want without computer bother. Convenience does cost money, and perhaps that's why you can't understand the reason, although the OP's justification does seem a little weird. Rob |
CD recorders
"Julian Fowler" wrote One other factor: what media are you using? Sorry if I am sounding thick but if you want to know what make of CDR's I am using then at the moment I am using JVC CDR for audio even though I believe this audio version makes no difference when recording via a PC. In the past I have used Maxell CD-R 80 XL-S As at least one other poster has responded, though, the first thing you need to do is acquire a copy of EAC (which will cost you nothing more than the suggestion to send a postcard to its author!) and use that instead of WMP for audio extraction. I will get a copy of this now, thanks guys. |
CD recorders
"Dave Plowman" wrote in message ... In article , Informer wrote: I have been burning music CD's on my computer but get distortion on the odd track at high frequencies. You're not using a 'normalize' feature in your software, are you? I have no idea. Where would I look? |
CD recorders
"Arny Krueger" wrote How does it feel to be the modern equivalent of the villiage idiot? Literally millions of people burn CDs on their computer without encountering this kind of problem. Some of these people are literally kids. Not too good at the moment Question, If using a CD burner gives an identical copy then why am I given a choice of burn speeds? Is this just dependent on the max speed of the CDR? |
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