Try setting the burn rate to 1x. Sometimes it doesn't do a good copy at higher speeds. Jan On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 22:56, R Parker wrote: > Hi Reuben, > > --- Reuben Martin <MartinR@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > I'm trying to burn some audio CD's and I always run > > into the problem that there are some CD players that > > just don't want to play the CDs that come out of my > > burner. I'm burning them in raw on a Plextor drive, > > so it _shouldn't_ be having problems. > > I trying to think of ways that the hardware could have > an impact and am failing to think of anything. Does > that make any sense? > > Apparently the > > CD's are not strictly compliant with Red Book specs > > though. (from the documentation CDrecord uses CD-DA > > rather than Red Book, I'm not quite sure what the > > differences are) > > If CD-DA isn't Red Book, then I wonder what is. My > impression has been that Red Book is simply the method > by which the audio files are burned onto the disk. > There are two methods; A, Disk at Once (DAO) and B, > Track at Once (TAO). Red Book is DOA. > > > This is quite annoying when I give people a CD and > > it turns out their palyer can't handle it. (Once > > there was even a CD-ROM drive that wouldn't play > > it!) Does anybody know of any solutions for this? > > I just use my own scripts to burn CDs. I've never had > a problem. What program do you use to write the CD? > And if you post a TOC file maybe someone here can spot > something wrong with it. > > Nobody else responsed which is why I am. Not because I > really know much about it. Although, I never have > problems with the CDs that I burn. > > ron > > > -Reuben > > > > > > > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail - Easier than ever with enhanced search. Learn more. > http://info.mail.yahoo.com/mail_250