you might've done an mp3 disc. if your car stereo doesn't have mp3 capability your outta of luck. did u check to make sure your cd player says: "cd-r/cd_rw compatable"? if u cant figure it out email me at ck_da_finest@hotmail.com
2007-08-09 16:34:14
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answer #1
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answered by ck_da_finest 4
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Before we had good technology to burn cd's, cd players weren't formatted to play cdr's (a burned cd). All of cd players made these days are usually cdr compatible but if you have a stereo in your car was made several years ago then it's not formatted to read the burnt cd. The only way to remedy this would be to get a new stereo installed. Unfortunately, I had this same issue. It's either replace the cd player OR go out and buy every cd that contains the songs you want to listen to! LMAO yeah right! lol Good luck!
2007-08-09 16:34:53
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answer #2
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answered by Kimi 1
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If your ripping off music, it could be copy protected.
Can your car play the type of file you recorded. Mp3 is the most common.
If you have a plain cd player, it can't read compressed files.
Did you test the recording? Does it play on your computer?
Is the file extension properly labeled? Example: song.mp33
Check the capacity of the disc. Is it filled?
Did you burn short cuts instead of songs?
Some players react to the dye of the disc differently.
Check the size of the file vs the original. If its not the same then you copied a short cut.
2007-08-09 17:13:18
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answer #3
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answered by T-Max 6
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if that is WMA report, then that is not any longer a loose codec, and it is not circulate platform. mp3 will in all probability play without problems - I purely drag and drop my song records to USB or CD, yet possibly it facilitates that I also have a Poineer DVD participant which will play WMA/mp3 and has DiVX and is properly suited with RW disks. possibly your stereo isn't properly suited. in case you desire to be genuinely particular, then obtain and set up AUDACITY - that's the very appropriate utility I used for enhancing audio, and it is likewise loose Open source utility. as quickly as I make CD's for human beings, I drop my records onto Audacity, and then export them in appropriate CD format - the comparable as advertisement CD's. you should desire mp3 to WMA records. living house windows is the enemy of song. living house windows invented DRM which led to many problems for many companies (Sony lost tens of millions, in addition they'd have crushed iTunes if it weren't for them opting to help DRM. F*** the RIAA) actually, you already admitted to stealing all your song, yet in my case, I rip my own CD's to mp3 format - yet my vehicle stereo won't play them. try Audacity, there is an extremely reliable possibility that it's going to artwork, although some vehicle stereo's (from the likes of Sony (tm)(freedomhaters - they help drm) are designed to end any form of copying - so which you should purchase a clean replica of the CD for each CD participant you very own?? i'm no longer sparkling as to why I have been given a thumbs down, yet i'm going to save making a song F*** the RIAA till Sony and Apple get the message :P
2016-10-09 21:49:52
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answer #4
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answered by bergman 4
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some stereos arent compatible with cdr format. in other words, it wont play burnt cds.
2007-08-09 16:28:43
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answer #5
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answered by mr. answers 2
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what format did you use when you copied your cd? , is your cd player mp3 compatible
2007-08-09 18:30:25
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I'll bet that you have the wrong format for the files. I believe it has to be a .wma extension. good luck.
2007-08-09 16:29:18
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answer #7
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answered by Fordman 7
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