converting mp3 files to a new format
#1
Posted 13 June 2008 - 02:55 AM
Thank You
Arctic Sid
#2
Posted 13 June 2008 - 03:42 AM
Audacity works wonders on converting files from one format to another. As to whether or not your car receiver or home theater system can recognize these files is based solely on the model of the receivers. For a base, can you please provide the manufacturer and model numbers of both your car receiver and your home theater system?
#3
Posted 13 June 2008 - 04:52 AM
Thank You Arctic Sid
#4
Posted 13 June 2008 - 05:05 AM
#5
Posted 13 June 2008 - 05:27 AM
Thanks
ArcticSid
#6
Posted 13 June 2008 - 05:56 AM
As far as creating video DVDs is concerned, you need a dvd burner software capable of format conversion to the dvd format . There are a number of free tools for this but i dont know about any as i use very less 3rd party applications for all my tasks. Some other member may tell you more about these tools. Vista comes with a very good dvd maker that does all for me. btw - nero, roxio suites all are capable of doing this dvd video burning.
#7
Posted 13 June 2008 - 08:00 AM
#8
Posted 13 June 2008 - 08:02 AM
arcticsid said:
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Yes, Audacity is a multifunctional(sp) application that will convert various audio files. You can learn about Audacity by clicking here. Most modern CD players, regardless of cost, support .wav files. That should at least take care of both your car and your home systems. If you decide to use this application, I can walk you through how to convert all of the files at once. I do need to let you know that .mp3 files are one of the smallest audio files (average about 4-5MBs). Conversely, .wav files are large (average about 40-50MBs). That being said, if you want to do this conversion, at least from .mp3 to .wav, you will need a good amount of space.
piyushsingh said:
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Hi Piyush, if I may clarify the quotes statement. CD players will play a data CD as long as the CD player indicates that it recognizes .mp3 files. If it does, than any CD, data or audio, can be played through that specific CD player. If the CD player does not support .mp3 files, than the only choice would be to either convert a format that the CD player does support or, as you stated, burn as an audio CD and let the application do the conversion.
#10
Posted 13 June 2008 - 08:24 AM
An even bigger benefit is that you can put between 150 and 160 .mp3 on one CD. At the time, I had almost 20 CD full of music. I would grab one CD, take it into the car, and have literally hours worth of music at my disposal.
(160 tracks average 4 minutes a track = 640 minutes divided by 60 minutes = about 10 hours)
#11
Posted 13 June 2008 - 08:47 AM
mphenterprises said:
hmm, maths.
160 tracks on a 700 MB cd gives 4.375 MB per song , 1024 KB in 1 MB and 8 bits in a byte and 4 mins for a song gives about a bit rate of 150kbps. hehe
That will produce a little buzz if sound is increased too much . ;-)
ps - hope you dont mind, i m just not feeling good today, need to ease up my mind a bit.
#12
Posted 13 June 2008 - 09:33 AM
#13
Posted 13 June 2008 - 01:09 PM
piyushsingh said:
As noted, most modern CD players can play MP3 disks (which are basically data disks with MP3 files)...as can most modern DVD players. Getting a new car will likely result in having this ability (not all, but it is fairly standard). Older CD and DVD players will generally NOT have this ability and thus you would need to make it a "music" CD that uses WAV files (most commercial CD players will play CD-R with songs recorded to them as WAV files...aka "music" CDs...but some might cough a hair ball at a CD-R and only like commercial CDs... but they are rare).
#14
Posted 13 June 2008 - 01:14 PM
piyushsingh said:
160 tracks on a 700 MB cd gives 4.375 MB per song , 1024 KB in 1 MB and 8 bits in a byte and 4 mins for a song gives about a bit rate of 150kbps. hehe
That will produce a little buzz if sound is increased too much . ;-)
ps - hope you dont mind, i m just not feeling good today, need to ease up my mind a bit.
Personally, I rip my songs to MP3 at 160 kbps. That is near CD quality. You have to be listening on a really good system and have really good ears to really notice the difference between it and the original CD. Yes, if you turn it up really loud, then you will start to better notice the difference...but then if I am listening to it that loud, then I have other problems! ;)
The real advantage is that with about 100+ songs per disk and a 6 disk changer in the car AND the fact that the stereo will display the MP3 tag information, I have hours of music that I can leave sitting in the car that can be rather quickly navigated through to what I want (the stereo has a menu option to list the "folders" on the disk, which corresponds to artists and albums). I was originally going to look into getting a hookup for my iPod for the car stereo, but this works so well that it is not really needed.
#15
Posted 13 June 2008 - 05:56 PM
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