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The machine is built to reduce time delays between stand by and burn. This machine will also burn every make of CD that I have put into it.
Only a few seconds transpire between the two operations. The sound quality is excellent.
I bought this cd burner to replace my Phillips 775 whick just never did work as well as I thought it should.After fighting the 775 for several years, it finally died completely. Some burners are disk specific, this one will do all that I have tried.
The Teak came to me in a timly fashon. It was easy to set up, and in a few minutes, I was burning songs from my reel to reel tapes and vynal records to disk.
I am pleased with the unit.
But there is a problem with which blank music CDS I use. I keep getting error messages. The Memorex brand does not seem to work well. Must have discarded about 20.(Maybe it was a bad batch) What works best without any problems are the TDK brand. I wasted a lot them. When I inserted a Memorex blank disc in the machine. I bought this unit about 4 months ago.
It makes excellent recordings. It works well. Owners manual is easy to understand. Highly recomended.
But it requires a certain type of CD (digital audio). You WILL have to read the instructions carefully, but is works pretty good. This product burns an original CD ok. However, I was disappointed in the short range of the remote control
Once you have the optimal recording level set you are ready to record. This is old school and I love it. Then play your record and push record and wait for record pause to show up and you can set your recording level by using the level plus or minus buttons. This way you can assure you will track each song properly without any problems. First put in a blank cd-r audio disc in the recorder and wait for the blank disc shows up on the display. I love it and I am getting back to recording my albums like I used to when I had a cassete recorder. You also have to manually track each song by pushing the record button between each song so you can separate the tracks.
It helps if you write down the song times on a sheet of paper so you can know when the songs will end. I almost bought a lp to mp3 product to record on my computer until I seen this product on Amazon.com. You have to use the analog input for lp's by pushing the input button on the front panel until analog shows up on the display and then push the auto/manual button until the manual input comes up on the dispay. Don't bother with the computer method this is much simpler to use and it works great. Just hook it up to your receiver and start recording your lp's in no time. I highly recomend this Teac cd-r recorder and soon you will be making your own cd audio disks and loving it.
I use it to copy my many LPs onto CDs for traveling and for work. It picks up most track changes when I adjust it up to -30db. I am down to my last three TDK re-writeable audio CDs. I like using CD-RWs to make the first copy because errors can be corrected. It makes good audio CDs most of the time. If I have a noisy record it works most of the time.
Recording from other CD players with the digital input sometimes does not work. Playback: On a few CDRs that have a long tracks of 15 minutes or more, a CD recorded on the TEAC will sound choppy when played on the TEAC, but fine when played on regular CD players.2. 3. When it doesn't work I get "REC ERROR" or "LOAD ERROR" and it stops.
This could be a problem causeed by my older CD-RWs. I like the adjustable automatic track marking feature. I've had the Teac CD-RW880 since July 2008. Audio CDRs are widely available, however, audio CD-RWs, the rewritable kind are NOT.
I've made around 50 good CDs, and had to throw away maybe 10 bad disks. I've had the following troubles:1.
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