Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

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JudyCl
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Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by JudyCl » Sat Jul 07, 2012 12:36 am

I just downloaded the newest .exe version and I'm using Windows 7. Following the instructions on the tutorial about recording streaming audio, I recorded a test file from a radio station on the internet, converted it to a .wav, moved it to my Windows Media player and tried to burn a CD. All I get when I put it in my CD player and play it back is a loud hum. I'm thinking I know so little about what I'm doing that this may be impossible for me to do, but I'm trying, so please be patient. It took me an hour and a half just to get this far. Thanks. Judy

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by steve » Sat Jul 07, 2012 12:53 am

JudyCl wrote:I just downloaded the newest .exe version and I'm using Windows 7. Following the instructions on the tutorial about recording streaming audio, I recorded a test file from a radio station on the internet,
At that point, did you try playing it in Audacity? Did it play correctly?
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by JudyCl » Sat Jul 07, 2012 1:00 am

Yes, it did.

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by JudyCl » Sat Jul 07, 2012 1:43 am

I think I just figured it out with lots of help from Google. I used a CD-R Music, didn't burn it right the first time, got a hum, and so that's still on there, right? I didn't realize I couldn't record over it. That brings up another question then. If I record a radio program and put it on a CD-R, that's it for that disc, right? But I just read that a CD-RW isn't good for playing music. What I'm trying to do is record radio programs, play them in the CD player in my car, and then go back and record some more.

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by kozikowski » Sat Jul 07, 2012 2:50 am

You should first get the basic process down with CD-R like you're supposed to, then try it with a CD-RW and see if it plays in your car. If it does, then you can do that forever -- or until the little magnetic domains wear out, or you scratch it.

It's not that CD-RW isn't good for music. It's CD-RW doesn't always get along with everybody's CD player. Do Not send of of those to your mum. Use the standard CD-R.

Koz

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by JudyCl » Sat Jul 07, 2012 2:55 am

So the CD-R with the 30 secs of hum is trash. Seems like I could go through a lot of CD-R's trying to get it right. I knew this was gonna be frustrating. Guess I know even less than I thought. Bummer.

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by kozikowski » Sat Jul 07, 2012 3:43 am

Yes. CD-R is write once, read forever -- or until the dye layer fades out, which it will eventually do. CD-R works by burning holes in a dye layer with a laser. The dye has similar characteristics to color photography. Once you put the holes in the dye, that's the end of the story. CD-RW works by an amalgam of magnetic particles and other magic. I never got much into it because it didn't do anything I needed, but you could change it later.

It's not recommended, but you can burn a CD-R as fast as the burner will scream. Burn a 60 minute show in 2 minutes. That's slow. It may not play very well if you do that, but you can. CD-RW needs to clear the old show and then burn the same spot repeatedly, so if you got used to the other process, CD-RW will seem like watching cheese age.

Koz

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by kozikowski » Sat Jul 07, 2012 3:48 am

How are you burning your CDs? Windows Media should let you play the whole disk as a preview before it fires up the laser. There's no excuse for burning, as we call them, beer mats or cocktail doilies. If Windows Media won't help you, free iTunes for Windows certainly will.

Koz

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by PGA » Sat Jul 07, 2012 5:47 am

I would reverse Koz's advice. Do all your test burns on your computer using one re-writeable media (CD-RW). Once you have got the content as you want it and playing on your system. Then burn the CD-R(s).

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Re: Burning a CD after recording streaming audio

Post by kozikowski » Sat Jul 07, 2012 12:23 pm

Then burn the CD-R(s).
But that leaves you with a pile of old CD-Rs under the seat in the car. I thought the goal was to use one CD-RW and continually update it as new shows came out. It's not a dreadful idea if you have the time and the disks work.

The CD-Rs at the beginning is just to get it all to work. If you start with the CD-RW and it fails, you never know what failed, the disk or the process.

Koz

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