Problem with Honda CD player and home-burned CDs

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by BE, Nov 27, 2006.

  1. BE

    BE Guest

    My 2001 Odyssey has the single disc CD player in the dash. The player has no
    problem playing retail CDs, but it struggles with CDs that I have burned
    myself. It will often take a couple minutes to find the starting point and
    begin playing. Once there it is usually OK, but if you skip a track, be
    prepared to wait sometimes 30 minutes for it to figure out where the
    skipped-to track is and latch on to it.

    It seems at its worst when it is playing a live album (such as a bootleg
    recording) - I don't know if the audience noise somehow messes with its
    ability to locate the beginning of a track.

    I have used gold, silver and other-colored CDs and they all have problems.

    Does anyone think this could be perhaps an artifact of the speed at which I
    burn these - that the Honda player would prefer something burned at 1x or 2x
    (instead of 8x or 16x)? Anyone else have this problem?

    Thanks,
    Be
     
    BE, Nov 27, 2006
    #1
  2. BE

    Nathan Strom Guest

    The CD player in my 2002 Civic has the exact same issue with many
    otherwise high-quality CD-R discs. It seems it's a bit of a picky
    player, but I've found the solution.

    Use Taiyo Yuden CD-Rs. They work perfectly in my Honda - just the same
    as pressed CDs.

    If you've never heard of Taiyo Yuden, that's no surprise -- they don't
    sell their own branded discs at retail in the US, only wholesale;
    however, they've manufactured discs in the past for Fujifilm, TDK,
    Verbatim, and other brands you might have heard of. They are generally
    regarded as one of, if not the best, CD-R and DVD-R manufacturers.

    Buying CD-R and DVD-R media retail is a tricky proposition -- primarily
    since brands and the actual manufacturers differ. One month the pack of
    TDKs you buy might be made by Taiyo Yuden and they will be really good
    discs, and the next they might be made by, say, CMC, a manufacturer
    with a lesser reputation. So you have people saying "TDK is great" and
    someone else saying "TDK sucks" and they might both be right for their
    respective discs with their respective players. So as a word of advice,
    if you care about quality, buy by manufacturer, not brand.

    The online store that stocks these with the best reputation is
    www.rima.com; you can also find them at many other places, such as
    meritline.com/cdrdvdrmedia.com (both owned by the same company, but
    sometimes different prices on each site) or supermediastore.com.

    Taiyo Yuden CD-Rs can also occasionally be found in retail stores, but
    it's a crapshoot. Fujifilm-branded discs that say "Made in Japan" on
    the packaging (but not "Made in Taiwan") are most likely TYs.

    Hope this helps.

    Nate
     
    Nathan Strom, Nov 27, 2006
    #2
  3. This may not be of any help to you. But, I had a similar problem with
    a completely different system that I solved by taking the action you
    propose. The record speed that seems to work best for me is 8x, so you
    might try to experiment a bit.

    I also found it necessary to turn off the multi-session function,
    which seems to be on by default in Nero.

    However, it is possible that the Honda simply will not read
    home-burned disks for some arcane reason.

    Are these .wav files or .mp3? If mp3, try burning a CD with .wav files
    and see if that works. 2002 CD players should read .mp3s with no
    problem, but you never know.

    Hope this helps. Report back, please.


    Elliot Richmond
    Itinerant astronomy teacher
     
    Elliot Richmond, Nov 27, 2006
    #3
  4. I haven't had this problem with the CD player in my 2004 Civic. Most of my
    CD-R discs are Maxells, and I burned .wav files onto them as audio tracks,
    at speeds ranging from 8x to 32x.
     
    High Tech Misfit, Nov 27, 2006
    #4
  5. BE

    Dave Kelsen Guest

    OK, Elliot, I gotta know: who wants to learn about itinerant astronomy?

    Sorry.


    RFT!!!
    Dave Kelsen
     
    Dave Kelsen, Nov 27, 2006
    #5
  6. BE

    BE Guest

    I forgot to mention that the recent batch of CD-R media I used was Verbatim
    brand. I don't know if they tend to have this kind of problem or not.

    As for the types of files I am burning - they are (lossless) .flac files
    that Toast Titanium somehow handles during the burning process. The
    "finished" file type as my iMac sees it is .aiff, which is the type it would
    call the individual track files of a commercial CD.

    I'll try burning one of the same albums that was trouble and do so at a
    lower burn speed and let you know how it plays.

    Thanks,
    Be
     
    BE, Nov 28, 2006
    #6
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