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View Full Version : Making more cd tracks with Nero


O2
28th June 2002, 13:30
Hey all,

I got lots of big mp3 (or wav) files that i want to put on cd.

When i import them i get 1 huge track that takes up the entire cd.

I know nero can split up this into tracks where i want. But how?

So does anyone have instructions where and how i can split the track up as easy as possible.

Oh and i want the songs to flow through one another, so there is no 2 second gap beteeen each track.

Got Milk?
28th June 2002, 19:17
I don't know how you can split tracks using Nero, I use BeSplit (http://dspguru.doom9.net/) to do it. You can remove the 2 second gap in Nero by right clicking the track, and selecting 0 seconds in the properties page.

O2
28th June 2002, 20:14
I'm talking about this in nero...

Select audio cd.

Add a file (i used a wav).

Right click on file on the right side (the side that's gonna be written)

Select Properties.

Select the 'Indexes, Limits, Splits' tab

There it scans the file and you should be able to split up the file into seperate tracks.

how tho?

makaone
29th June 2002, 10:38
You can use the Audio editor and cut up the whole track into your desired tracks.

As far as tacking out the 2 sec gap it can go as low .01 which i use when i create a ddwav cd , but the gap between the first and second track must stay at 2 secs.

This is why i use Easy CD 5 , as it is alot easier to use ,as well as you can get the desired gap between all tracks.

Got Milk?
29th June 2002, 15:23
Originally posted by makaone
As far as tacking out the 2 sec gap it can go as low .01 which i use when i create a ddwav cd , but the gap between the first and second track must stay at 2 secs.I believe there only has to be a 2 second gap before the first track. I've had no problem creating CD's with no gaps between tracks (using seperate WAVs).

O2
1st July 2002, 04:43
Thanks for the info.

I got the track split up, but i think there should be easier ways to do that.

Skullworks
12th July 2002, 08:26
Gaps are generally created by burning the CD in "track at once" mode. It then puts a 2 second gap before the begining of the next track. This happens because the laser actually shuts down during that gap. - The burning software available today gives you alot more control and "Cheats" on many of the ISO 9660 and other "books".

The simple solution is to burn in "Disk at Once" mode. - The laser burns one continuous track, but with index markers, from start to finish. DAO is also the method required for overburning, but thats another topic.