Cd recorder continuation


Are all cd recorders able to use any blank disks for making copies?
If not is there still a big price discrepency between the different varieties of blanks?
pedrillo
It depends what you mean by a CD recorder. If you use your computer to burn the CD, you don't need one of those music-only discs. Which, by the way, have nothing at all to do with quality or performance. They are priced higher because you are paying royalties into a general fund when you buy them.
I've heard this topic for some time, and the machine you use determeins that, although, trying those used in a PC setup can't hurt.... either they'll work or not. Right?

The roaylaty mention is accurate too.

Blank CDs like audio & video components differ in quality too. Mostly though it's their ability to be used with the burner in question. some burners like some blank CDs, some don't. Many CD/DVD burner makers provide a list of compatible discs for use with their products. you can start there, but that list isn't cast into stone, unless you are calling the burner maker for support.... then you'll have to say you used their acceptable listed discs.

Why are you still burning CD's? Not judging you or anyone, I just want to know why. I went digital years ago (both streaming and storing music on a Blusound, and now upgraded to an  Aurrender, and have never looked back. No more storing CD's, worrying about scratches, or CD players going bad, spending money on CDR's, or the time spent burning CD's. 

I still burn cds using MAM-A gold cds off JRiver MEDIA off my laptop.  I do load cds onto my Melco server.  There is an audible difference on my highly resolving system.  CD > server > streaming.  All three sources do though sound really good.