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I know that my car stereo will do this, and I am burning WMA's from Windows Media Player, so I know it will work. I've burned CD's like this before and they don't show up. What's the trick??

Thank you!

2006-09-01 06:12:30 · 4 answers · asked by BB 5 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

4 answers

First you have to have a CD player in the car that will allow for MP3 CD's. These are different from regular CD's in the fact that they include what is called an ID3 tag. This tag allows certain CD players to display Title, Track, Album and other information. Make sure first that the CD player in the vehicle has that capability. Next make sure that you have a CD burning program that will allow for MP3 CD's. A regular CD can hold usually around 20 songs, MP3 CD's can hold hundreds of songs.

2006-09-01 06:29:53 · answer #1 · answered by seattlemsfan22 2 · 0 0

No, you don't need them to be mp3s or data disc. It's possible to give titles to normal audio tracks. I do that all the time. But not every cd player will see them. They need to be able to show "CD text".
Before you burn the cd (or copy it) look in your CD burning software (Roxio, Nero, etc) and where you list of tracks is just click and edit track names. That is, change it from "track 1" to "whatever the title is". Then burn it.

2006-09-01 07:34:42 · answer #2 · answered by Zeke 2 · 0 0

perchance considering that's a production unit stereo the perks are limited. My boyfriend has an alpine stereo (no longer production unit put in) and all he performs are MP3 burned cd's and that they consistently coach artist and identify.

2016-09-30 06:02:02 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Normally, you have to burn the discs as DATA, not music. And your CD player has to support playback of such data discs.

2006-09-01 06:24:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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