You can use 3rd party software here is a great software program link http://www.yuansoft.com/cd_to_mp3/how_to_convert_cd_audio_track_in_mp3_format.html
or you can search for free mp3 rippers
32 MB
MP3 format data can be stored on a CD and played back on any MP3 compatible CD player.
If there is mp3 in an standard audio CD, it is on a data track, and thus not playable on a regular CD player because it is not an audio track.
You can convert a CD to MP3 using a disk burner. A disk burner will burn the information on a CD and convert it to MP3 format where you can listen to the music.
MP3 is an audio compression file format. Music CDs you purchase from the store come in a wav format. If you use a CD Ripper like Express Rip, you can then save these songs onto your computer in an mp3 file format. Then you can use an audio CD burning program, like Express Burn, to create a music CD with MP3 file formats. Notice that your original CD will only hold about 12-15 songs and your new mp3 CD will hold around 100 songs. That is one of the many advantages of using an mp3 format.
It has to be in music CD format. IT will not play MP3's.
The Coby CXCD282 does not play in MP3 format. This boombox simply plays CD's, AM/FM radio and cassette tapes for listeners enjoyment.
the format on the CD is not mp3... so you have to convert it to mp3
If you have a regular car stereo than you cannot leave your files in the original mp3 format because they will not be read. Before burning your CD you have to convert the files into a regular music file. All CD burning programs allow you to do that, there is usually an option to either burn a music CD or an mp3 disc. Choose to burn a music CD. Some car CD players will accept mp3 discs in which case you can leave the files in their original format. The benefits of this is that you can fit a lot more songs on a CD and the track names will be displayed (where possible).
Hi, You can use any audio software to convert mp3 to .wav format or you can download free audio format converters through internet. I just want to make one thing clear that by converting mp3 back to CD format you are not going to improve the audio quality instead it will just increase your file size bcoz CD format (.wav) files are 1411 kbps. And if you are converting this just to make it play in a CD player which doesn't support mp3 then it's fine. Rgds, Brijith
It is a CD, but instead of having stand CDA (CD audio) files on it, the disc has MP3 files on it. It wont play on CD players that only play CDA, but it should play on any CD player that supports MP3 decoding.
Yes there is a loss of qualityIn short form : Yes it does go down. MP3 is a form of "lossy" encoding. When you 'rip' a song from a CD to mp3, you are actually encoding a .wav file to .mp3 file. Higher the mp3 bitrate, lower the loss of quality but there is a loss. This is why the mp3 tracks occupy much less space than the wav audio tracks.When you are converting back from MP3 to CD (to a .wav file basically), your source is the lossy mp3 track, which you can not restore back to the original. Converting to a .wav file will not lose anything from the quality of mp3 recording but mp3 was lossy to start with.