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7 answers

It has to do with the CD you chose as well as the format you wanted. It's best to burn music to music CD-R or CD-RW & then choose music option. If you chose MP3, your car CD has to be MP3 compatible. The blank music CDs are a few $$ more but are specially designed for music than the data of the CD-R & CD-RW. You'll have a better quality music CD with the special music CD-R or CD-RW.

2006-08-01 07:12:49 · answer #1 · answered by Belle 6 · 0 0

it would be the brand of the cd's used. also did u convert the files into cda not just a mp3 collection.
but most cd players will take any brand of cd-r or even cdrw.

2006-08-01 07:09:43 · answer #2 · answered by Paultech 7 · 0 0

it' s probably just the CD not the brand of because i had some and one them happened to be mess up it was just one CD the rest of them work or it just didn't finalize right sometimes that happens

2006-08-01 07:17:19 · answer #3 · answered by chelbel 1 · 0 0

if it is an old cd player it may not have cdr capabilities, and if it does maybe you did not finalize the cd after you burned it...if you do not finalize it, it will not play in any player if you did and it works in another player then your cd player is outdated and does not have the right capabilities

2006-08-01 07:11:12 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Did you burn it as an mp3 cd or an audio CD?

If you burnt it as an mp3 and your stereo does not support mp3 formats then there's your problem.

2006-08-01 07:09:27 · answer #5 · answered by HotRod 5 · 0 0

It could be your CD Player. Is it older?

I have an older DVD player that does not play my newly ripped DVD's. But, my newer one in my bedroom does.

2006-08-01 07:10:18 · answer #6 · answered by Special Ed 5 · 0 0

its proably ur player it doesnt support to play fake discs hapens to my truck player too

2006-08-01 07:12:28 · answer #7 · answered by luvnoasis 2 · 0 0

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