Convert MP3 & WAV to CD: Fast, Free Burner Guide
What this guide covers
- Goal: Burn MP3 or WAV files to an audio CD playable in standard CD players.
- Outcome: A step‑by‑step, free method for Windows and macOS using built‑in tools or free software.
Quick overview
- WAV is uncompressed audio; burning to an audio CD preserves quality.
- MP3 is compressed; most CD players don’t read MP3 discs unless they support MP3 discs. To make a standard audio CD, MP3 files must be converted to PCM (WAV) before burning.
- A standard audio CD holds ~74–80 minutes of audio.
Tools (free)
- Windows: Windows Media Player (built in) or CDBurnerXP (free).
- macOS: Finder (Music app in recent macOS) or Burn (free).
- Cross‑platform: fre:ac, ImgBurn (Windows), Exact Audio Copy (Windows).
Step‑by‑step (Windows using Windows Media Player)
- Create a folder with the MP3/WAV files in the order you want.
- Open Windows Media Player → select the Burn tab.
- Drag songs into the burn list. Windows Media Player will convert MP3s to the correct CD audio format automatically.
- Insert a blank audio CD‑R (74–80 min).
- Set burn options: Audio CD, write speed (choose moderate speed for compatibility).
- Click Start burn and wait until finished. Verify by playing in a standalone CD player.
Step‑by‑step (macOS using Music/Finder)
- Import MP3/WAV files into the Music app (or Finder in older macOS).
- Create a playlist in the desired order.
- Insert a blank audio CD‑R.
- In Music app, File → Burn Playlist to Disc. Choose Audio CD and burn speed.
- Click Burn and wait until complete.
If you need to convert MP3 to WAV first
- Use fre:ac or Audacity:
- Open files → Export → choose WAV (PCM 44.1 kHz, 16‑bit).
- Save converted files to a folder, then burn as above.
Tips for best results
- Use CD‑R (not CD‑RW) for better compatibility.
- Use 44.1 kHz, 16‑bit WAV for Audio CD format.
- Burn at 4x–16x speed for wide player compatibility.
- Test the disc in the target player before mass copying.
Troubleshooting
- Disc not recognized: try lower burn speed or a different brand of CD‑R.
- Track order wrong: arrange tracks in the playlist before burning.
- Shorter total time than expected: check you’re creating an Audio CD (not a Data CD with MP3 files).
If you want, I can give step‑by‑step instructions for a specific OS or recommend which free program to use.
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