Can I play CD-R's? | Ford Explorer Forums

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Can I play CD-R's?

95ExplorerLtd

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We got a cd-burner yesterday and I have been looking through HU magazines and alot of them say " be able to listen to CD-R's" and stuff like that. Does this mean that I need to get one of those just so I can listen to CD-R's or CD-RW's? Because I copied the Dr. Dre cd and it plays but it cuts off the ends of songs and the speaker make funny noises. Then I copied the cough cough Britney Spears cough cough cd and it said that it couldnt find the cd at all, but n the computer and cd player in my room it worked fine. Whats the deal here?
 



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Computers will always be able to read CD's better than audio CD players because 1) the lasers are better, and 2) the computer corrects for scratches and stuff better because of the computing power. I play CD-Rs in my truck all the time. I get some funny noises, but most are due to mp3>CD conversion. The truck does sometimes get the track order wrong, but I've only had 2 tracks not show up. It mostly depends on the quality of the CD's, the quality of the burner, and the quality of the data being burned.
 






Yea, most car stereos can play the CD-R's or CD-RW's, except for some of the cheaper ones. And the reason the songs cut-off is because the computer does that when it transfers the songs onto cd. I'm not really sure on why they do that, but trust me your CD Burner is not messed up because all my firends and I have the same thing on our cds. It cuts off about 3-4 seconds, no big deal. And those funny noises are from transferring a CD into your computer into MP3 files from the other people you got them from because I have had them to and sometimes when people rip or transfer the CD's into their computers, they do it wrong and then it makes those funny noises when you listen to them. The main thing is that your CD Burner is fine and your Head Unit in your car most likely will play all the burned CD's unless it is an older cd player. Hope I could help you out!

Peace,
Audio Warlock
 






never had a problem playing burned cd's in my stock radio, or my pioneer changer. what you need to get is that kenwood mp3 player. i think its like 10 1/2 hours of music per disc! when copying or creating a disc, try to aviod teh screen saver comming on, this causes pops and glitches in your copies. if your still having problems, just simply copy at a slower speed. good luck.
 






It's almost impossible to find a CD player that won't play CD-Rs anymore. However, they are still around. Still, I'd have to say that the problem may not be your player, like everyone else said.

I also tried to burn a back up of the "cough cough" album. If you're referring to her first album, the problem is that it's an enhanced CD, and therefore, the songs are not recognized under the normal format. I've had this problem with all my enhanced CDs and I don't know what to do about it, so they just stay off the mix CDs. :( Enhanced CD song files are seen as multimedia files instead.

The other things are that you may notice that some CDs aren't cut perfectly in between songs, sort of like (especially in rap CDs) the music is a little intermixed or there is talking that's starting to be blended it. Because there is no perfect blank gap of sound, they have to cut the song somewhere, and so although it may not sound like it listening to the whole CD through, if you have on song in a mix of them, you'll notice it's cut off. Or, there IS a gap, and then the funny noises are the beginning of the next song!

Just like Alec and AW said, the computer needs to devote ALL its power to burning. I usually turn off every application on my computer before running the burning program. The other thing would be that if you just got the burner, you may not have told the program to run it's diagnostics so that it can evaluate all of your CD drives to figure out the optimum reading characteristics, so that should help out too. The other thing is that it's difficult to do CD to CD copies. If the CD reader and burner have different reading and writing times, it forces the computer to coordinate both correctly. The best, albeit sort of slower way is to copy all the tracks to the harddrive and then burn the CD based on the files from the hard drive so it can take its sweet time.

That's my experience.

Anyway, if it is the Enhanced CD, I hope you've watched the video on it!

Jon
 






It even varies depending on the maker of the burner. Some will play on my home player and some won't. Every CD-R I've got will play in the Clarion in my Explorer and my computer.
 






CDR

The only problem I ever have is when I buy the cheap CDR's. When I use a good disk like Memorex or Sony I have no problems weather it's "backing up" a CD or downloading from napster "before I buy it."
 






Never had any problems either. Only get noise because of bad copies from napster, but I "proof" the tracks before I copy them. The bad ones get dumped. As long as you record your music onto a CDR using the CD audio format you'll be in good shape. Spend the money and get Mem's or Sony CDR's.

It also depends on what software you use. I use Sony's Spressa and it works excellent. Leaves 2 seconds between tracks and rarely cuts them unless the copy was already cut when I got it from Napster. I have also used Sony CDXtreme and it copies just as good, but without the 2 second space which is good for full length mixed cd's. Thanks to Napster, I haven't bought a CD all year!
 






While we are on the subject, what is the difference between a CD-R and a CD-RW? will they both play music or is one for data?

X-Man
 






CD-RW means rewritable. That means you can erase it, with a burner, and write on it again. The problem is that regular CD players cannot read music on a CD-RW, only CD or DVD players in computers. CD-RW's also cost more.
 






ALOT MORE!!
 






Is there a big difference stepping to the "Audio" specific CDRs like Sony's or Memorex? I have Sony standard CDRs right now and my Kenwood HU will play them but with lots of static and scratches. Won't read the Maxells I had from a while ago. Would prefer to buy new CDs before a new Head Unit. Any other tips on burning (software, etc). I'm using HP software right now (HP 9140i 8X burner)

Thanks!
JH
 






Definitely get the audio quality CDR's for music.....definitely.
 






I've had no problems playing Memorex high capacity CD-R discs. Unlike ordinary CD-R's they hold an extra 6 mintues of music and and extra 50 MB. They are designed for audio use. I got them in a 50 pack at best buy. With no jewel cases I think it was something like $39.95 but it could have been as much as $45.95. Out of all the discs I've used they seem to be the best. Memorex is the way to go. I'm not using a high quality burner either. It's the compaq one that came with the computer.
 






I have used the cheaper CD-R's like Imation and they would give me nothing but problems, while burning it would stop at the first or second song and start closing the disc, out of like 10 tracks it would record the first 1 or 2 songs and eject the disc. I change to Sony did the same steps as before and never had a problem, I have now recorded over 20 disc with Sony CD-R's and no problems.

X-Man
 






I had the same problem with the Imation CD's. I'm hooked on the Memorex CD's now. No problems after over 30 CD's burned.
 






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