If you really want to burn a lot of CD's you need a CD Duplicator.There are a lot of types or you can hobble one together yourself with an old computer case.
I believe what you are trying to refer to is mass-production.
The term for the manufacture of large quantities of a product quickly and cheaply is known as mass production.
The mass of KCl in the mixture can be calculated by subtracting the mass of the remaining components from the initial mass after burning. For the first mixture, after burning it, the mass of MnO2 and KClO3 will be removed, leaving only KCl. Therefore, subtract 65.467g (mass after burning) from 53.300g (initial mass) to find the mass of KCl, which is 12.133g.
In a chemical reaction the mass of reactants is equal to the mass of products; burning is a chemical reaction.
The mass of the initial candle is identical with the sum of masses of released gases from burning and the residues remained.
Because of the law of conversation of mass
The law of conservation of mass states that mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction; it is simply rearranged. An experiment to demonstrate this is burning a piece of paper: the mass of the paper before burning will be the same as the mass of the ashes, smoke, and gases produced after burning. This experiment confirms that the total mass before and after the reaction remains constant.
The mass of the dust formed on burning a piece of paper is likely to be less than the original mass of the paper. This is because burning paper results in a conversion of some of the paper's mass into gases and ash, which can float away. The remaining dust would likely be a small fraction of the original mass.
Because of the law of conversation of mass
When an element burns, its mass remains the same. The burning process involves a chemical reaction that rearranges the atoms of the element, but the total mass of the element before and after burning remains constant, according to the law of conservation of mass.
It would loose mass as it is being consumed by burning.
Unless you're buying mass quantites of trucks, you'll probably never deal with PACCAR directly - you'd deal with their subsidiaries, such as Peterbilt, Kenworth, or DAF.