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Lack bass on burned CD's

  • Thread starter Thread starter Bluehail
  • Start date Start date Dec 12, 2003
B

Bluehail

Dec 12, 2003
#1
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #1
Seems burned CD's have problems in my CD player in the car in bass output. They are lackluster to say the most. However these CD's when played anywhere else have the bass. This only happens with burned cd's. It makes no sense to me. Is my problem unique or is it well known?
 

91BlckGT

Founding Member
May 24, 1999
2,386
75
68
in a van, down by the river
Dec 12, 2003
#2
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #2
Bluehail said:
Seems burned CD's have problems in my CD player in the car in bass output. They are lackluster to say the most. However these CD's when played anywhere else have the bass. This only happens with burned cd's. It makes no sense to me. Is my problem unique or is it well known?
Click to expand...

Wierd is more like it. I've burned more CD's than I'd care to admit, both from MP3's and straight CD copy's.

While the MP3's tended to lack bass because of the conversion from PCM to compressed format, and then back again, the staright copies always sounded as good as the original.

Don't know what to tell you beyond that.
 

DaFeared

Banned
Jan 2, 2003
853
0
0
The Octagon
Dec 12, 2003
#3
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #3
Bluehail said:
Seems burned CD's have problems in my CD player in the car in bass output. They are lackluster to say the most. However these CD's when played anywhere else have the bass. This only happens with burned cd's. It makes no sense to me. Is my problem unique or is it well known?
Click to expand...

I agree.. it's strange that it would lack the bass with your system but not others... what's the bitrate you burn these songs at?
 

IndyBlk5.0

New Member
Nov 24, 2003
1,122
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New Whiteland, IN
Dec 12, 2003
#4
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #4
sounds like a head unit problem... depending on the age and who makes it, i think it doesnt have the right components to read mp3's right. Ever hear burned cds on an old computer compaired to a new one? Sounds like a cd player
 
B

Bluehail

Dec 12, 2003
#5
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #5
DaFeared said:
I agree.. it's strange that it would lack the bass with your system but not others... what's the bitrate you burn these songs at?
Click to expand...

the mean bit rate is 128.
 
B

Bluehail

Dec 12, 2003
#6
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #6
IndyBlk5.0 said:
sounds like a head unit problem... depending on the age and who makes it, i think it doesnt have the right components to read mp3's right. Ever hear burned cds on an old computer compaired to a new one? Sounds like a cd player
Click to expand...

The mp3's are burned to standard format like any other cd. This problem makes no sense to me. What I will do is do a disc copy and try the burned cd, and try the original too.

I just think maybe when sound is run through the sound card of my computer it normalizes for bass? and the problem lies in the mp3's. But basically this is all rambling. I will test out the situation and let you all know.
 

IndyBlk5.0

New Member
Nov 24, 2003
1,122
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0
New Whiteland, IN
Dec 12, 2003
#7
  • Dec 12, 2003
  • #7
Bluehail said:
The mp3's are burned to standard format like any other cd. This problem makes no sense to me. What I will do is do a disc copy and try the burned cd, and try the original too.

I just think maybe when sound is run through the sound card of my computer it normalizes for bass? and the problem lies in the mp3's. But basically this is all rambling. I will test out the situation and let you all know.
Click to expand...
Its your head unit.
 

DaFeared

Banned
Jan 2, 2003
853
0
0
The Octagon
Dec 14, 2003
#8
  • Dec 14, 2003
  • #8
Bluehail said:
the mean bit rate is 128.
Click to expand...

This may be your problem or it may not be... but 128 bitrate is low.... it's terrible sound quality to say the least and you will notice the difference on any decent sound system. Try and use 320 bitrate.... 256 is good as well.... 192 at the very very lowest... Try downloading some songs that are 320 bitrate.. burn them... play them... and see how they sound... You will get better sound quality.. but I can't promise that it will fix the bass problem (although it might).


If the increased bitrate doesn't help any then that other guy is probably right.. it sounds like it could just be the head unit.. Might be time for a new one.
 
B

Bluehail

Dec 18, 2003
#9
  • Dec 18, 2003
  • #9
DaFeared said:
This may be your problem or it may not be... but 128 bitrate is low.... it's terrible sound quality to say the least and you will notice the difference on any decent sound system. Try and use 320 bitrate.... 256 is good as well.... 192 at the very very lowest... Try downloading some songs that are 320 bitrate.. burn them... play them... and see how they sound... You will get better sound quality.. but I can't promise that it will fix the bass problem (although it might).


If the increased bitrate doesn't help any then that other guy is probably right.. it sounds like it could just be the head unit.. Might be time for a new one.
Click to expand...

I did a direct CD copy and no bass problem. The only reason I posted is because it all sounds the same on my computer. Err. But a select burned song at 256kbit showed the most bass on the cd. Confuses me. Maybe I can pick up a 3rd party normalizer utility before I burn.
 
B

Bluehail

Dec 22, 2003
#10
  • Dec 22, 2003
  • #10
Stunned again.. che3ck this out

http://www.fliptech.net/bitrate.shtml

The bitrate, even 112kb/s bitrate leaves the original base waves untouched. Treble is only thing that is cut off with decreased quality mp3.

So my question now is the why, if it is the head unit why is it cutting bass on mp3 burns but not other burns or CD's?
 

di0de

Founding Member
Nov 9, 2002
87
0
7
Clarkton, NC
Dec 23, 2003
#11
  • Dec 23, 2003
  • #11
Are you sure some type of EQ isn't applied during the decompression process? I burn mp3 cd's regularly and haven't had any problems...
 

scothew_gt

StangNet's Biggest ASS
Founding Member
Aug 23, 2001
2,223
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0
B'Ham, AL
Dec 24, 2003
#12
  • Dec 24, 2003
  • #12
The higher the MP3 compression, the better bass response it is going to have. They say 128kbps is cd quality, I think 192 is more like it. I dont use any mp3's under 192 because of the lack of quality definition. Try grabbing some mp3's off line that are at 320 and see how these sound.
 

scothew_gt

StangNet's Biggest ASS
Founding Member
Aug 23, 2001
2,223
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0
B'Ham, AL
Dec 24, 2003
#13
  • Dec 24, 2003
  • #13
Oops, didnt read what DaFeared posted earlier, I pretty much agree with what he says.
 
S

snowb07

New Member
Jul 22, 2003
235
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soon to be CT
Dec 24, 2003
#14
  • Dec 24, 2003
  • #14
stupid ?? but have you tried a different type of media. . some players do not like some burned discs ,,, but if not then it maybe a bitrate problem
-fred
 
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