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real cd quality vs burned cd quality
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<blockquote data-quote="Qfactor03" data-source="post: 1985778" data-attributes="member: 567339"><p>It's not like making copies of cassette tapes back in the day. Every copy made from a copy degraded more and more. Unlike a tape, there is no mechanical contact to read the sound from the media. The disc simply contains digital data which is read by the laser. If you copy the original format, it is an exact duplicate of the original digital data on the disc. If you rip it to MP3, there is compression and data loss. At this point, you have altered the original file and the sound quality will suffer.</p><p></p><p>Edit: ^^^^^^ I guess that might be possible as far as reading and playing a disc, but frequency range has nothing to do with digital copy from one disc to another. It is just placing the same pitts of information from the original onto the recording layer of the writeable media.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Qfactor03, post: 1985778, member: 567339"] It's not like making copies of cassette tapes back in the day. Every copy made from a copy degraded more and more. Unlike a tape, there is no mechanical contact to read the sound from the media. The disc simply contains digital data which is read by the laser. If you copy the original format, it is an exact duplicate of the original digital data on the disc. If you rip it to MP3, there is compression and data loss. At this point, you have altered the original file and the sound quality will suffer. Edit: ^^^^^^ I guess that might be possible as far as reading and playing a disc, but frequency range has nothing to do with digital copy from one disc to another. It is just placing the same pitts of information from the original onto the recording layer of the writeable media. [/QUOTE]
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