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12 answers

I know that the Dodge factory radios play cdr's (at least up until 3 mos ago, when I quit the dealership)- Does your cd play in other players? If it does, you might either have a "iffy" brand of cd-r's or you might have a fluke radio. Brands of cd's can vary a lot with playability in different players. I know that Best Buy lets you return opened blank media, if you only used one and determined they are incompatible with your player (at least they let me do that with DVD-R's). If that still doesn't work, go to the dealership, and try the cd on a vehicle on the showfloor. If it plays, the one in your truck is junk; and while you are there, you can make an appointment for warrenty radio replacement (assuming you have warranty left).

If it doesn't play in other players (home cd player, discman, etc.) you may have to check your settings on your burning program. Be sure you are creating an "audio cd", and not a "data cd", and be sure to check the box stating "finalize disc"-this is necessary for most players. Reducing the burning speed (ex. from 16x down to 2x) may help also. Good Luck!

2006-07-14 08:17:58 · answer #1 · answered by jonny_schultze 2 · 0 0

There could be a wide range of reasons. Either you didn't finalize the CD, the CD is scratched, or it's also possible that your CD player isn't able to read that Make of CD's. It used to happen alot a couple years ago where certain makes of CD's (e.g. Verbatim, Maxwell, Kodak, etc.) weren't able to be read by some CD players because of the color (quality) of the disk. Kodak is usually the best bet (in my experience) if you want to be sure your CD's play in most CD Players

2006-07-13 15:59:33 · answer #2 · answered by germ 2 · 0 0

It relies upon on the CD participant. CD-R's use a particular type of dye this is darkened by a laser on your CD burner. even as placed right into a CDpersistent the dye absorbs laser mild from the participant's examine laser. standard CD's, instead of soaking up the laser mild, refract it making use of a chain of raised bumps to create bits. some CD gamers have a laser of the right frequency to be absorbed by CD-R's, others do no longer. in simple terms attempt it, it received't wreck your CD participant.

2016-10-14 10:56:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You burned them as mp3's instead of creating a music cd. You would only be able to get about 10-20 songs on the cd if you create it correctly. A cd can hold a lot of Mp3's.

2006-07-13 15:59:06 · answer #4 · answered by Kristonia 3 · 0 0

Did you remember to finalize the CD? It won't play unless you do

2006-07-13 15:54:54 · answer #5 · answered by Jim2386 3 · 0 0

I don't know, other than the radio is just junk. I treid to play them in my trail blazer and my entire cd player broke . total BS

2006-07-13 15:55:52 · answer #6 · answered by ~brigit~ 5 · 0 0

If you burnt them, it might not work. Burnt CD's don't work in my car either. Replace the radio with a newer one that does play them.

2006-07-13 15:56:03 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

your player should be cd-r compatible .Either this is the problem or you should Try finalizing it.I mean that the player Is not a computer . try finalizing or you should buy a new player.

2006-07-13 16:00:15 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Maybe it doesn't read just cd-r's. Try recording them on cd-rw's. Right on?

2006-07-13 15:56:02 · answer #9 · answered by arabslayer34 3 · 0 0

your cd player has to be cdr compatible and if it is you probably did not finalize the disc

2006-07-13 15:55:20 · answer #10 · answered by jlimages 3 · 0 0

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