I have some MP3 files that I downloaded via http onto my hard disk. They work fine when I play them directly from the hard disk. But then I copied them to a CD-R disk to play them in my car stereo, and the copies seem to be corrupted. The music plays normally sometimes, but very often (sometimes a few seconds apart, sometimes minutes apart) the music drops out for a few seconds, and then begins again exactly where it left off. Or it may manifest the "skipping" effect I used to hear on phonographs back in the day before CDs.
I replaced the car stereo (because of a different problem) with another unit of the same model, and the behavior is the same. I also get the same problem when I try to play the recorded disk on the computer, using the same drive I recorded it on. I also tried burning the CD using a different computer, and I get the same problem.
I have the feeling that I'm missing something fundamental. Perhaps I'm not using the right sort of blank disk. I'm using some recordable CDs that I bought a year or so ago. They're made by TDK, and they're described as "80 Min 700 MB CD-R". They also have the logo for "Compact Disk Recordable" on them. I remember they were fairly inexpensive. I bought them at CompUSA and have been using them to store data and application files with no problems.
Am I on the right track suspecting that I need better quality disks? If so, what criteria can I use to get blank disks of sufficient quality? Are there other things I can look into to find the cause of the problem I'm experiencing?
-Mark
I replaced the car stereo (because of a different problem) with another unit of the same model, and the behavior is the same. I also get the same problem when I try to play the recorded disk on the computer, using the same drive I recorded it on. I also tried burning the CD using a different computer, and I get the same problem.
I have the feeling that I'm missing something fundamental. Perhaps I'm not using the right sort of blank disk. I'm using some recordable CDs that I bought a year or so ago. They're made by TDK, and they're described as "80 Min 700 MB CD-R". They also have the logo for "Compact Disk Recordable" on them. I remember they were fairly inexpensive. I bought them at CompUSA and have been using them to store data and application files with no problems.
Am I on the right track suspecting that I need better quality disks? If so, what criteria can I use to get blank disks of sufficient quality? Are there other things I can look into to find the cause of the problem I'm experiencing?
-Mark
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