| Music Gurus! need help! - Click HERE for Original Thread |
| Kiddo |
| Is there any possible way to get a genuine CD quality with burned music? what if I have the legit cds to get the songs from? is there a possible way? burned music (320kbps mp3s) sound like absolute ass and the subs are all fuzzy. I'm really tired of switching through cds and would just like to have it all on one disc. any solutions? |
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| dance_of_curse |
| cd quality is 64kbs so anythign higher then that is better 320 i believe is studio quality....sopmethings wrong with your subs/headunit |
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| Kiddo |
| isnt cd quality 1441 or 1446 or somehting like that? cause a 320 mp3 doesn't even sound that great on my computer |
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| ChromeDragon |
Something is wrong with your mp3s then. I usually burn 128kbps tracks and have absolutely no problems.
You can always copy from cd to cd. I can't recall the format that it's burned in, but any cd burning program can do it. |
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| Kiddo |
its not like its terribly fuzzy but its distinct enough that you can tell the quality of the songs aren't that great. oh btw I'm using
Clarion DXZ835MP Deck
Concept CC-2502L Amplifier
Proaudio PX210S Subwoofers |
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| Soulfly |
Yeah,.. CD's are 128Kbps... and some songs sound like shit because the person you downloaded it off of, Or someone else that had it before them, Turned up the volume and is now getting distortion OR the original is actually a lower quality then re-recorded to a better quality.. But when you record something thats shitty 64Kbps.. it will be the same shittyness even if its 320kbps.. Due to the fact.. What you record is what you get.. Although It will be more of a clear sound with 320kbps.. but still shitty distortion..
Now count how many times I said Shitty...:P :lol: :lol: |
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| qualthar |
quote: Originally posted by Kiddo
isnt cd quality 1441 or 1446 or somehting like that? cause a 320 mp3 doesn't even sound that great on my computer
Yeah the bitrate on a normal CD is up there in the 1400-odd range. I find songs around the 320 rate sound pretty good, although the CD ripping program should have settings that control what quality the songs are ripped at. Maybe change it higher and see what happens. |
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| Mustard |
the problem is your converting to MP3... which is compressing it, and then switching back to CD audio.
you need to rip into a WAV file, or WMA to keep as much quality as possible.
Just look at the file size of a ripped WAV and then a ripped MP3
and Mp3 on pretty high bitrate will be like 8 or 9 megs for a 3 min song... the same song as WAV will be like 30 megs.
just something to think about |
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| Markgase2000 |
Cd quality recordings are 44100Hz. Its been rounded out cus the higher you go it creates different kinds of distortion or loss of music. Lowwer makes it static and distorted. I use 44100Hz for recording cd's from whatever format I just change it with a wave editor.
Cd=44100hz
Radio=22050hz
Voice=11025hz
These are common sources and hz ratings I would record sounds at. If I were to record outdoor sounds I would use higher than cd quality to capture as much detailed sound as I could. |
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| SilverNeonRacer |
I've done direct CD to cd copies not conversion to MP3 or anyother compresses format.. and it's still not as good as the original. The thing is an original factory made cd actually has the pits in the membrane, but a burned one doesn't.
In the DB drags original to burned made a 2-3db difference. |
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