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Several reasons exist for this: (1) Never copy CD data off of a CD-ROM drive for putting on a CD-R. always copy to a fast hard drive and burn from there. (2) Don't run unnecessary TSRs (Win) or Extensions (Mac) if you can help it. (3) If your CD-R drive is a SCSI device, make sure it's the last device in the chain or better yet, have it be the only device in the chain. (4) If you have lots of ram, devote at least 32 megs of it to the buffer used in your CD burning program. (5) Make sure your hard drive is defragmented before burning. You want a fast, smooth, uninterrupted flow of data from the drive to the CD-r. (6) If your source files sound fine, then you may be running into some program interfering with the flow of data from the hard disc to the cd-r drive. (7) If this is the case, exit all programs and leave the CD burning program running. (8) Turn off virtual memory and anything else that plays havoc with system level interrupts. (9) If you are running a Mac be sure and use the Motorola math-lib available for free at their site - this will let you get every bit of speed out of the machine. (10) Shut off all screen savers. (11) Win98 is, shall we say, unstable at times. For best results, you may wish to use 95. Your mileage may vary.