jlapointe wrote on Thu, 18 November 2010 18:08 |
Sometimes you can fool the player by adding a couple seconds of silence after the last track. |
Gold wrote on Thu, 18 November 2010 18:15 | ||
I do this to every master unless told otherwise. I never liked the clunk clunk of the CD transport stopping right after the last note. |
jlapointe wrote on Thu, 18 November 2010 18:08 |
I've seen a similar problem before - a tiny bit of (I assume buffered) audio makes a click at the end of the last track. Sometimes you can fool the player by adding a couple seconds of silence after the last track. - J. |
mastermind wrote on Thu, 25 November 2010 09:35 |
I can remember years ago when I was running a Sonic classic system, and using Jam to burn the actual CD (from a Jam image file created by Sonic) that there was a set of circumstances that lead to a burst of audio right at the leadout. I can't for the life of me remember what it was that caused it (a specific set of circumstances that I then learned to avoid) since that was 10-ish years ago. I too always leave a bit of silence at the end of audio - I like to round up to the next :05 or :10 second mark... t |