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<blockquote data-quote="eengrms" data-source="post: 190614" data-attributes="member: 547046"><p>DUH.</p><p></p><p>Burn speed can have an effect on quality. The faster you burn, the more likely you are to incorporate pops, clicks, and other weird sounds in with the CD. That is though, if you have a crappy burner. If you get a Plextor, or something of quality, you won't have that problem. I have a 40X Plextor and write all my CD's, whether they're audio, data, or MP3, at 40X and haven't had a problem with a single one. I used to own a crappy Digital Research 24X writer and had to back the speed all the way down to 16X just to get a clean burn. So yes to answer the first guys question, burn speed can have an effect on audible quality, regardless of the bitrate you are burning. It also has to do with your computer's quality, I have a P4 2.0Ghz, so I am able to burn at 40X reliably, but it didn't seem to help me with the Digital Research.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="eengrms, post: 190614, member: 547046"] DUH. Burn speed can have an effect on quality. The faster you burn, the more likely you are to incorporate pops, clicks, and other weird sounds in with the CD. That is though, if you have a crappy burner. If you get a Plextor, or something of quality, you won't have that problem. I have a 40X Plextor and write all my CD's, whether they're audio, data, or MP3, at 40X and haven't had a problem with a single one. I used to own a crappy Digital Research 24X writer and had to back the speed all the way down to 16X just to get a clean burn. So yes to answer the first guys question, burn speed can have an effect on audible quality, regardless of the bitrate you are burning. It also has to do with your computer's quality, I have a P4 2.0Ghz, so I am able to burn at 40X reliably, but it didn't seem to help me with the Digital Research. [/QUOTE]
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