.wav to dvd-r ?????????

tpb

New member
Hi,

I hope someone can help out with a very frustrating problem.

How can i burn .wav files to dvd-r media in order to make compilation disks of my music.

Nero 6 doesn't want to play ball and have downloaded a number of other programs none of which work either.

It must surely be possible after all your only burning a file to a disk?

Hope someone has the answer :confused:
 
why not compile them as MP3s and burn in UDF/ISO mode you get more on as mp3s and most dvd players can playback mp3's

as far as i know you cannot burn DVDS as you would an audio cd with wavs as an audio dvd with cda tracks !?
 

tpb

New member
VIPER_1069 said:
why not compile them as MP3s and burn in UDF/ISO mode you get more on as mp3s and most dvd players can playback mp3's

as far as i know you cannot burn DVDS as you would an audio cd with wavs as an audio dvd with cda tracks !?
Hi,
Thanks for the reply.

The problem i have is that neither my cd player, dvd player or car cd player can play mp3 so i was hoping to compile one dvd rather than 10 cd's of music and having to keep changing discs.

I'm not technically minded myself but surely in todays techy world there must be a way of doing this.

Ever hopefull !!!!
 
Many "play anything" DVD players will play a CD of MP3's, but not a DVD.

Making a genuine "DVD-Audio" is beyond the capability of most (all?) available PC software, so that only leaves the option of making a low bitrate DVD video, with full DVD quality (or as good as you can make it) sound.

PS. If you only want to "put the files on DVD media", then choose the same procedure as for any other data, making a data DVD that would play with a WAV playing program on the PC, but nowhere else.
 
as the boys said you can not master a real Audio DVD, such software doesn't exist; such discs can only be pressed not burned;

what you can do is compiling a usual Video DVD; as video just use a cover snapshot or a blank screen; your current WAVs then will be the soundtrack for that "video"; such discs are compatible with all DVD player which are able to handle burned Video DVDs;

have a look at our tutorial section how to compile a Video DVD: http://www.dvdrbase.com/forumdisplay.php?s=&f=117&page=1&pp=25&sort=lastpost&order=desc&daysprune=-1


Greetings from
Duracell
 
You can try Steinberg Wavelab 5, although the audio disks it creates are not 100% compliant to the DVD-Audio standard. But they do play in most DVD standalones.
The con is the price of the software (700 $), but applications which are able to create "pure" DVD-Audio cost almost ten times as much...
 
Top