Point one, Cassette Tapes are questionable to beging with. In my experience, they have a very short life span. However, your connection of the tape decks analog output to the CDR's analog input then immediately gets converted via the CDR's Analog to Digital converter. So once you have burned this disc, it is a digital recording.
The comments that digital does not sound as good as analog becomes irrelevant here in that virtually all discs (initially) were recorded via analog microphones into analog to digital converters at the recording point/site with equipment that likely costs many times that of the CDR that you are referencing.
Based on your other thread, you are somewhat new to this area (and I am no expert by any means). But in the end, transper your tapes to CD and your hard drive and the sound quality (while not analog) will last a lot longer than your cassette tapes sound quality. Also, don't get so caught up in the "analog sounds better". While there may be some truth to that debate, you will also find that well done digital can also sound pretty great. Plus there is not that much "true" analog available as new releases anymore (yes, I know there are some company's that are still recording and producing in true analog, but the list and categories are much more limiting that was is available otherwise).
The comments that digital does not sound as good as analog becomes irrelevant here in that virtually all discs (initially) were recorded via analog microphones into analog to digital converters at the recording point/site with equipment that likely costs many times that of the CDR that you are referencing.
Based on your other thread, you are somewhat new to this area (and I am no expert by any means). But in the end, transper your tapes to CD and your hard drive and the sound quality (while not analog) will last a lot longer than your cassette tapes sound quality. Also, don't get so caught up in the "analog sounds better". While there may be some truth to that debate, you will also find that well done digital can also sound pretty great. Plus there is not that much "true" analog available as new releases anymore (yes, I know there are some company's that are still recording and producing in true analog, but the list and categories are much more limiting that was is available otherwise).