You can always listen to your digital audio directly on your computer, transfer the files to a mobile media player (like an iPod or Zune), or you can burn the files onto a CD.
It is very likely that the optical drive on your computer can burn audio CDs for you. Of course you will need to have a CD writer installed on your computer and you will need the correct CD media. Look at the documentation for your optical drive to learn more about burning audio CDs.
Because we do not manufacture any type of optical drives and there are thousands of different system combinations, we are unable to give exact instructions on burning files to CDs.
However, we do not limit the files you can download from our site (unless we are required by the original publisher to provide the file in a DRM WMA format). They are fully capable of being burned to CDs.
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There are several methods of burning your CDs offered on your burning software. It is recommended that you select Audio Burning instead of Data for burning CDs to be played on your car CD player.
Follow any on-screen prompts to burn the files to CD. Many programs will have you click an additional confirmation button to finalize the burn. If you skip this step, the CD will not play in your car's CD player.
Insert the CD into your car stereo for a test run. In most cases, the disc should play just like a commercial audio CD. If your car stereo can't play the disc but your computer can, your car stereo can't decode files and you will need to use a different format.
Another essential point to consider is that most channels cannot read CD-RW (Re-Writable disk) , it is therefore recommended that you opt for CD-R to be burnt for the stereo and car CD player.
You can also change the brand of CD-R and burn at a lower speed 8x to get a better result. -
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