Hi,
I know these are really basic questions, but I don't think I quite understand the process of burning MP3 files onto a CD.
If I am wrong about my first assumption it will clear up a lot of things. The questions are all very similar and related and someone may be able to answer them all by just helping me to understand more about the file types and the conversions that take place when making a standard CD from MP3 files.
1.) I have assumed that an MP3 file isn't just compressed, but that data has been permanently removed from the file and is lost forever. Is this true?
2.) If I make a CD with MP3 files and I make it to play as a regular CD, not a MP3 CD, then the songs on the CD are in a different format, but they haven't been reconverted to true wave files or lossless files, correct?
3.) I have made many CDs in the past and some of the older ones were made with MP3 files and the newer ones have been made with WAVE files. I didn't lable the CD well and therefore on some CDs I don't know what kind of files I began with. When I view the CD songs' properties they all look similar. All of the files are listed as cda or something similar. dbPowerAmp labels them as cda and lists them as "CD" files on the player even though the original files were MP3s.
When looking at the properties of a song file on a CD, is there a way to determine what type of file the original file was a MP3 or a Wave file?
4.) I did a test to see if I could distinguish between two files of the same song where one was a 128 kbps and the other was a 320 kbps. When I look at them on the player they are both the same size. Does this mean they have been converted to the same quality file?
5.) If I record three songs that have three different file types - a 128 MP3, a 320 MP3 and a WAVE file and burn them onto a CD into a standard 80 minute CD format, what will be the difference in quality on the final CD between these three songs.
Thanks a bunch to anyone who can help me understand this better.
DJJR
I know these are really basic questions, but I don't think I quite understand the process of burning MP3 files onto a CD.
If I am wrong about my first assumption it will clear up a lot of things. The questions are all very similar and related and someone may be able to answer them all by just helping me to understand more about the file types and the conversions that take place when making a standard CD from MP3 files.
1.) I have assumed that an MP3 file isn't just compressed, but that data has been permanently removed from the file and is lost forever. Is this true?
2.) If I make a CD with MP3 files and I make it to play as a regular CD, not a MP3 CD, then the songs on the CD are in a different format, but they haven't been reconverted to true wave files or lossless files, correct?
3.) I have made many CDs in the past and some of the older ones were made with MP3 files and the newer ones have been made with WAVE files. I didn't lable the CD well and therefore on some CDs I don't know what kind of files I began with. When I view the CD songs' properties they all look similar. All of the files are listed as cda or something similar. dbPowerAmp labels them as cda and lists them as "CD" files on the player even though the original files were MP3s.
When looking at the properties of a song file on a CD, is there a way to determine what type of file the original file was a MP3 or a Wave file?
4.) I did a test to see if I could distinguish between two files of the same song where one was a 128 kbps and the other was a 320 kbps. When I look at them on the player they are both the same size. Does this mean they have been converted to the same quality file?
5.) If I record three songs that have three different file types - a 128 MP3, a 320 MP3 and a WAVE file and burn them onto a CD into a standard 80 minute CD format, what will be the difference in quality on the final CD between these three songs.
Thanks a bunch to anyone who can help me understand this better.
DJJR
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