"Andrew" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hi there,
>
> I am having problems burning audio CDs with my HP Cd-writer 8200 -
> I'm running Windows XP and am using HP RecordNow. I can record data
> discs fine, it is just audio CDs that refuse to complete the writing
> process. RecordNow will get 50% of the way through the disc and then
> come up with an "error writing disc" message and abort the operation.
> If I look at the disc, it is only partially burnt (indicated by the
> color variation between the burnt portion and unburnt portion).
>
> Its clearly not a hardware issue since I can burn data discs, so I
> am curious if there are any known problems with RecordNow, WinXP, and
> HP 8200 series with audio burning. Is it possible that the drive is
> trying to pull data faster than my computer is reading off the hard
> drive (due to other processes or fragmentation). Any other
> suggestions for how this may be fixed? Is there better audio
> recording software out there?
One possibility is that you are recording at a rate higher than the CD-RW or
the target media can handle. Another, if you are doing a disk-to-disk copy,
is that the two CD drives are competing with each other for bandwidth on the
same IDE channel (which is why some burning software will issue a warning
and suggest copying to the image to the HD before writing to the destination
CD). Another is that your system may be running an application that is
demanding enough system resources that the burn process gets interrupted.
Another is that your source media has a big ol' goober on it, but software
usually reports a read error in that situation.
Provided the CD-RW is not sharing the same IDE channel and you are not
exceeding the recording rate of the CD-RW or the media, and barring the
other things I already babbled about, you "shouldn't" be experiencing
difficulties.
Try burning at a lower rate. Instead of 48x, try 40x.
I haven't had any problems with Nero, if you're looking for an alternative
piece of software.
www.nero.com It provides some pretty good protection
against buffer underruns.