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My CD is severely scratched (not my fault). I want to put the unscratched songs on the computer. But then my mom yelled at me not to put it in the computer because my PC is old-ish and she doesn't want the CD to break it. So now I want to listen to it on my portable CD player so I can see which songs aren't scratched so I can put the un-stratched on my computer, but I'm paranoid now that the CD will break it even though my CD player is new-ish. What should I do?

2007-07-03 11:28:40 · 6 answers · asked by maria 4 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

Thankyou, I'm playing it on my CD player now and its not skipping (its an amazing Sony) though it skipped everywhere else. But I'm still worried about putting the disc on the computer because they skip in there.

2007-07-03 13:14:35 · update #1

6 answers

i have never heard of a scratched cd breaking a cd player......

2007-07-03 11:37:35 · answer #1 · answered by I AM BACK 7 · 0 0

Playing a scratched Cd cannot damage a player. The CD data (where the music is on the CD) and the player never actually come into contact with each other. A laser reads the data from the CD and turns that information into the music you hear. You could put it into your computer or your stereo without any problem.

2007-07-03 18:38:48 · answer #2 · answered by Jared 1 · 2 0

A scratched Cd can not harm a Cd player, because a new CD player won't get as confused. Just make sure you do not put your scratched CD in the computer, becasue your mom is right. This will harm the computer. Good luck!

2007-07-03 18:38:12 · answer #3 · answered by CandyCane 2 · 0 0

Nutshell answer: You should be fine.
Warped (not flat) or broken CDs may cause damage, but just a scratch shouldn’t hurt. A CD player works by having a low power laser reflect off of the surface of the CD. The player then reads (sees) the reflection and turns that into music. Scratches will cause the laser to not be able to be read correctly, and will cause your music to jump. But there is no physical contact, so no risk of damage to the player. (The laser is too low power to damage the inside of the unit.)

2007-07-03 18:37:57 · answer #4 · answered by Jeff C 4 · 2 0

It won't hurt the player. CD's are read by a laser. Nothing touches the cd in the reader. You can fix many scratches on cd's with chap stick. rub some lightly with a very soft clean cloth in a circle following the same path on the cd that you would if it was a record. Otherwise, many places like hastings etc can fix em.

2007-07-03 18:38:20 · answer #5 · answered by randy 7 · 0 0

get an mp3 player, probably usless advice. but you wont have any problems playing the CD in the computor or cd player but it will skip some of the music because of the scratches

2007-07-03 18:37:25 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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