I have a Carver SD/A-490t CD Player circa 1991. It will play a CD flawlessly but chokes on a CD-R or CD-RW. Can this be corrected with a new transport or is this a design limitation?
Reflectivity of CDr and CDrw is less than factory stamped discs. A common issue with older players, changing the transport with a different one with similar specifications probably won’t help.
Older in- dash car CD players are extremely picky as well. Newer ones that recognize .mp3 files are more flexible in what they’ll play, more willing to play the lower reflectivity AZO dye discs.
A good quality CD-only transport trumps a newer, fancy, play-anything player when it comes to CD playback. Particularly the Philips CDM-1 through CDM-9 swing arm transports.
The Carver SD/A-490t will play a CDR-Music disc, but not a CD-R disc. What is the difference? Here is a picture of the transport. Is a Transport transplant a thing?
From what I read somewhere a long time ago is that part of the price of purchasing the “music” variety of recordable discs went to a slush fund to partially compensate music artists for the rampant duplication of their copyrighted material.
There may also be subtle differences in the reflectivity of the aluminum and formulation of the dye for the sake of compatibility with the players.
PHILIPS TK699 player has a TCD201R laser in it. is the "R" variant compatible with the "B" variant above? No idea, but if you can find a Philips TK699 cheap, it may be worth finding out.