
That's why such devices were also called "CD burners". Writing on them was achieved thanks to a powerful laser in CD writing devices, which heated their surface to create those pits. Writable discs had a thermo-sensitive chemical structure. The pressure was what created the track and pits on their surface. A laser head in a CD reader could then "scan" that track and, depending on the elevation of each point, "read" data as zeroes and ones.Ĭommercial CDs were pressed, literally, from a master disc. Data was stored on an imperceptible spiral track on the metallic surface as a sequence of pits.

Those little discs were a combination of a protective plastic layer and a thin metallic surface.

So, let's see how you can turn your modern MP3s into old-school Audio CDs, just like the older folks did back in the day How Do Audio CDs Work?ĬDs are all but obsolete today.
