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Data Stutters when burning music

Discussion in 'Audio' started by aldago, Mar 30, 2011.

  1. aldago

    aldago Member

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    I'm using Nero to convert mp3 music files to cda and then burn them. Problem is
    that when I play the files on my computer they are perfect but when I burn them
    there's an awful lot of stuttering which makes the music not enjoyable. I've tried
    burning at slower speeds to no avail. Anyone have any other suggestions???

    Emachine Info:

    Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition SP3
    Processor Intel ~3199 Mhz
    RAM 1.536GB
     
  2. Mez

    Mez Active member

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    Why are you doing what you are doing? Are you converting them to cdas first then burning the cdas to the disk? Even though some persons swear by Nero I think it went second rate 10 yrs ago. They keep coming up with more do-dads but the never try to perfect anything they do. Go to the top sticky, near the bottom of that long sticky is

    Media Monkey and other Reviews Cnet

    Click on that download and install. Burn your CDs with it. They have that process down pat. Burn mp3s to a "a CD that can be played on any audio player". That will convert mp3s etc to CDas on the fly and burn them to your CD. Your mistake was converting them to cdas then trying to burn them with Nero. There is only one way to make a proper real cda and that is to rip with DBpoweramp converter. The reference version will allow you you burn them back to the disk. Building cdas from an mp3 or even a wave is a joke. They will never be exactly the same because about 25% of the data is error correcting information that is never ripped except with dbpoweramp. The rest are only approximations. Thay are more than adequate but Media Monkey will do the same but do it right. dbPA is the only way I know to burn an EXACT copy of a track from a CD and burn it to another disk. Of course that is just for grins? Humans can't here the difference lossless and a 190 BR mp3 that has only 20% of the data in a blind test. Most of the data on a CD preserves information well beyond human hearing. Ultrasonics have massive band width while base has none.

    One last point since I can't figure out why you would make the cdas first. I hope you know that increasing the bit rate of an audio does not improve the quality. How can it? The computer just fills the extra space with garbage it makes up. You didn't think it is going to figure out all the data you lost by magic?
     

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