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    #21
    Re: CDs make me sick

    I've never had a CD go bad on me.
    Some of mine have turned gold in color due to sitting directly under sun light. They still work fine, though. I have found some pretty scratched ones too, and they all read okay on my LG CED-8080B.

    I still use CD-Rs and CD-RWs. In fact, I prefer them over DVDs most of the time, especially if I need to write small files.

    Also due to their low data density, they can take a lot more abuse than DVDs.

    Comment


      #22
      Re: CDs make me sick

      TopCat,
      See how far requesting a "location" gets you?
      I'm constantly asking people to do that, but........alas.....

      Some dude will come on a forum and ask "where can I buy a whatsis?"
      I'll tell him to go down to Staples. Then he says "we don't have those in India"... Touche'
      It would have saved a lot of time and discomfort if he'd of just put his location into his Public Information in the first place.

      The only saving grace with CD's, DVD's, etc, is that the professionally made ones are Stamped, like the old Records, and not burned like we do at home.

      So the factory produced disks should last for many years longer than the ones we burn ourselves. And those Stamped disks will read on drives that are no longer able to read the Home-Made disks.

      Too many people think that just because a disk says 48X on it, that it should be burned at that speed. WRONG! The slower the burn, the better the burn and the less likely it will have errors on it. I never burn any CD or DVD at over 8x for CD's and 4x for DVD's.
      Then the disk goes right into a Tyvek sleeve and then into a Disk Bank for safe keeping. If one of my disks is not in the drive, then it's in its sleeve. They are NEVER left laying around Naked.

      The only problem I have with CD/DVD's is the burners themselves. They are all made in China, by the lowest bidder. It's a modern miracle that they work at all. I wind up changing out my own DVD burner about once a year.

      But in spite of what I just said, they are still a lot better than my very first CD writer. It was the size of a boot box (bigger than a shoebox) and cost me (used) $149. for a 1X drive. We've come a long ways, since then. OH, and it required a special driver card to be installed in a slot in the computer.
      I think that was something akin to a SCSI card.

      Cheers mates! (be thankful for what you have!)

      The Doctor
      Last edited by ThePCDoctor; 05-03-2012, 11:32 AM.
      Experience is truly the best teacher.
      Backup! Backup! Backup! Ghost Rocks!

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        #23
        Re: CDs make me sick

        Originally posted by ThePCDoctor View Post
        Too many people think that just because a disk says 48X on it, that it should be burned at that speed. WRONG! The slower the burn, the better the burn and the less likely it will have errors on it. I never burn any CD or DVD at over 8x for CD's and 4x for DVD's.
        Too true. However high-speed CD-RWs often require to be burned at at least 12x though they work just fine.

        But seem to have an even worse life than CD-Rs, every single CD-RW I've owned eventually ends up with the reflective layer full of holes and little tracks where it looks like it's been chewed by a caterpillar or something.
        "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
        -David VanHorn

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          #24
          Re: CDs make me sick

          Originally posted by Keatah View Post
          why would you want to step on them?
          It's just one more thing to whine about.

          If they were gold plated, he'd bitch that they were "too shiny"
          36 Monitors, 3 TVs, 4 Laptops, 1 motherboard, 1 Printer, 1 iMac, 2 hard drive docks and one IP Phone repaired so far....

          Comment


            #25
            Re: CDs make me sick

            Originally posted by ThePCDoctor View Post
            Too many people think that just because a disk says 48X on it, that it should be burned at that speed. WRONG! The slower the burn, the better the burn and the less likely it will have errors on it. I never burn any CD or DVD at over 8x for CD's and 4x for DVD's.
            Then the disk goes right into a Tyvek sleeve and then into a Disk Bank for safe keeping. If one of my disks is not in the drive, then it's in its sleeve. They are NEVER left laying around Naked.
            +1.
            In fact, I think this is why my CDs have lasted so long.

            When I got my first CD burner (LG CED-8080B - got it used on ebay for $30), I was only burning CDs (RiTek RFD80M) on 2x. Later I started burning on 4x. Now I just go max speed with that burner - which is not a problem since it tops out at 8x. It never gave me a coaster CD, except early when I got the burner - but that was a fault with the software I was using at the time (it was some free, poorly programmed crap).

            Even with other burners, I don't go above 16x for CDs (with 16x being used for CDs that I don't care much about). Normally 8x to 12x is what I use. 2x and 4x are too slow and wear out the burning laser since it has to work for too long. 8x is quicker so there's less wear on the laser.

            Originally posted by ThePCDoctor View Post
            The only problem I have with CD/DVD's is the burners themselves. They are all made in China, by the lowest bidder. It's a modern miracle that they work at all. I wind up changing out my own DVD burner about once a year.
            Well, lasers do have a finite life, so the more you burn, the quicker they will break. Same goes for the the spindle motor. Of course, the problem is severely accelerated if the drives use low-quality lasers and spindle motors - which all of today's drives do, unfortunately. Hence the high-failure rate.

            Comment


              #26
              Re: CDs make me sick

              ImgBurn shows the available write speeds when the CD is inserted. I burn at the lowest speed. Whether it takes 6 minutes or 1.2 minutes makes no difference to me.
              sig files are for morons

              Comment


                #27
                Re: CDs make me sick

                That's bad. Really not a good idea to burn at the lowest speed - lots of discs have the setting imprinted in the read only section for compatibility reasons (so that people won't return the discs when they put them in let's say a 2x external cd-rw unit) but this doesn't mean the discs should be written at that speed.

                The newer CD and DVD discs have different chemical formulations in the substance they use so they're really not suitable for 1x-4x speeds.

                With the DVD-R or DVD+R discs that are rated for 16x and up, you really shouldn't go lower than 4-6x... and with CDs I would dare to say don't go lower than 8x.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Re: CDs make me sick

                  Is that why some cheap 48x discs I had failed when burnt at 48x, because they were designed to go fast?

                  Cheap discs are just cheap, and will fail quickly no matter how you burn them.

                  I don't go 1x due to sheer slowness, but do 4x sometimes. never had a problem yet. But I use decent media.
                  "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                  -David VanHorn

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Re: CDs make me sick

                    No, it's due to quality control or simply because you bought some "grade b" discs.
                    It's hard to tell, often a manufacturer will "outsource" some of their discs to third party companies.

                    For example, Verbatim has the AZO technology which is supposed to be very good and makes durable discs BUT at least in Europe, the discs with AZO that they make are only the ones in jewel case... the big bulky cases.
                    The ones in slim cases or the ones in 10/25 packs are actually made by CMC Magnetics or Moser Baer in India and are not made with AZO.. and are obviously cheaper.

                    example :



                    This is Verbatim AZO (an exception to the rules, the later cake boxes are outsourced) :


                    Pre-recorded Information:
                    Manufacturer ID: MCC 03RG20

                    Recording Management Area Information:
                    HL-DT-ST f144 DVDRAM GH20NS15

                    Physical Format Information (Last Recorded):
                    Disc ID: 0@P-!-00
                    Book Type: DVD-R
                    Part Version: 5
                    Disc Size: 120mm
                    Maximum Read Rate: Not Specified
                    Number of Layers: 1
                    Track Path: Parallel Track Path (PTP)
                    Linear Density: 0.267 um/bit
                    Track Density: 0.74 um/track
                    First Physical Sector of Data Area: 196,608
                    Last Physical Sector of Data Area: 2,486,735
                    Last Physical Sector in Layer 0: 0

                    Performance (Write Speed):
                    Descriptor 1...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 2290127 (0x0022F1CF)
                    -> RS: 9,168 KB/s (6.8x) - WS: 5,540 KB/s (4x)
                    Descriptor 2...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 2290127 (0x0022F1CF)
                    -> RS: 9,168 KB/s (6.8x) - WS: 11,080 KB/s (8x)
                    Descriptor 3...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 2290127 (0x0022F1CF)
                    -> RS: 9,168 KB/s (6.8x) - WS: 22,160 KB/s (16x)
                    Descriptor 4...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 2290127 (0x0022F1CF)
                    -> RS: 9,168 KB/s (6.8x) - WS: 24,930 KB/s (18x)
                    Descriptor 5...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 2290127 (0x0022F1CF)
                    -> RS: 9,168 KB/s (6.8x) - WS: 27,700 KB/s (20x)


                    You can see even if the disc has 16x pe el, the max speed reported in it is 20x. 4x is really not recommended for these.

                    I don't have access to my printable DVD-R to show you they're made by others but I can show you with CD-Rs:

                    non-azo 700MB:




                    ATIP Information:
                    Disc ID: 97m26s66f
                    Manufacturer: CMC Magnetics Corp.
                    Start Time of LeadIn: 97m26s66f
                    Last Possible Start Time of LeadOut: 79m59s71f

                    Performance (Write Speed):
                    Descriptor 1...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 706 KB/s (4x)
                    Descriptor 2...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 1,411 KB/s (8x)
                    Descriptor 3...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 2,822 KB/s (16x)
                    Descriptor 4...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 4,235 KB/s (24x)
                    Descriptor 5...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 5,646 KB/s (32x)
                    Descriptor 6...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 7,057 KB/s (40x)
                    Descriptor 7...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 296658 (0x000486D2)
                    -> RS: 3,656 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 8,468 KB/s (48x)


                    The max speed inside the disc is listed as 48x, the disc outside says 52x. Also, outsourced to CMC Magnetics. OK discs, but not comparable with AZO.

                    And now the real thing, AZO CD-R, Verbatim DataLifePlus :


                    ATIP Information:
                    Disc ID: 97m34s23f
                    Manufacturer: Mitsubishi Chemical Corp.
                    Start Time of LeadIn: 97m34s23f
                    Last Possible Start Time of LeadOut: 79m59s73f

                    Performance (Write Speed):
                    Descriptor 1...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 706 KB/s (4x)
                    Descriptor 2...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 1,411 KB/s (8x)
                    Descriptor 3...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 2,822 KB/s (16x)
                    Descriptor 4...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 4,235 KB/s (24x)
                    Descriptor 5...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 5,646 KB/s (32x)
                    Descriptor 6...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 7,057 KB/s (40x)
                    Descriptor 7...
                    -> B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00
                    -> EL: 323996 (0x0004F19C)
                    -> RS: 3,654 KB/s (24.4x) - WS: 8,468 KB/s (48x)


                    As you can see, not lying about the max speed, 48x on it and in the profiles...


                    Anyway... your discs didn't fail because you burned them at 48x like i said... the burner actually won't burn them at 48x or the 48x is achieved only on the last 50-100 MB of the disc in the case of CD-R.

                    There's several methods of controlling the speed: CLV (constant linear velocity), CAV (constant angular velocity), partial CAV and others... most modern ones are partial cav. With the later, there's several zones where the drive can ramp up its speed to burn the next section.
                    See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_linear_velocity

                    The drive's firmware also has a table of data regarding the chemical substances used in the disc and a manufacturer code and these are often used to override or "optimize" the way the unit writes to that disc.

                    The problem is some manufacturers clone the information from discs made by more quality manufacturers so the drive uses the wrong strategy to burn your disc and discs fail.

                    With my current DVD burner for example, even if the disc says it supports 24x sometimes the writer won't go higher than 16x... it happens with bottom of the barrel discs such as Princo or Budget. I use these to create memtest discs for friends (2-8 MB on them is no problem)

                    If I choose a burn speed of 20-24x and it likes the disc because the firmware has information about it, it follows a "writing strategy" in which the first 800 MB or so are written at 8-10x (depends on what the disc reports as minimum, then it jumps to 16-18x and finally at about 3.5 GB it goes to 20-24x all the way to 4.4 GB
                    That's why I don't even bother with speeds higher than 12x-16x. If I want the dvd to last me more than 1 year, I burn it at 8x... otherwise it depends on how many I have to burn but usually 10-12x. 16x won't finish it faster but will make more noise.

                    Oh... why 8x minimum... a lot of DVD writers only enable their burn fail protections at 8x or higher... if for example there's a hiccup and the hard drive becomes very stressed, the drive would fail to pause and wait for data at less than 8x write speed.
                    Attached Files
                    Last edited by mariushm; 05-09-2012, 11:52 PM.

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                      #30
                      Re: CDs make me sick

                      i dont store data on cds anymore
                      My Computer.
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                      Motherboard GigaByte GA-A75M-S2V
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                      SB Audigy 2 ZS [B800] Sound Card
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                        #31
                        Re: CDs make me sick

                        I write CDs at 16X and DVDs at 6X-8X.

                        Comment


                          #32
                          Re: CDs make me sick

                          Originally posted by mariushm View Post
                          No, it's due to quality control or simply because you bought some "grade b" discs.
                          It's hard to tell, often a manufacturer will "outsource" some of their discs to third party companies.

                          Anyway... your discs didn't fail because you burned them at 48x like i said... the burner actually won't burn them at 48x or the 48x is achieved only on the last 50-100 MB of the disc in the case of CD-R.
                          I know how it works, I was being sarcastic... the discs were cheap junk.

                          All I'm saying about slow burning speeds is based on my experience which is this:

                          Mitsubish AZO (and other half-decent media) burnt at any speed, 4x- 52x all worked fine.

                          Cheap generic brands: work at 4x-24x, higher than that, sometimes resulted in errors when reading.

                          Typically I don't go above 12x on anything anymore. I also suit the drive to the disk. I prefer to burn CDs with a CD-RW drive and DVD with a DVD-\+RW drive. I try not to burn CDs in DVD-\+RW or CD-RW\DVD-ROM drives.

                          I have noticed that DVD drives seem more optimised for DVD media and don't seem to support CDs as much.
                          "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                          -David VanHorn

                          Comment


                            #33
                            Re: CDs make me sick

                            I have found with my SONY DVD Writer, generic media (Tesco) likes to be burned at 16x for CDs (8x is less reliable) and 8x for DVDs to be most reliable. Too slow is as bad as too fast. Ritek G05 dye is good, but you need to make sure the firmware is right because drives with old firmware had the discs fail weeks after burning with dye problems.

                            Comment


                              #34
                              Re: CDs make me sick

                              Just for the record, I ended up downloading a pirated copy of XP as a result of this mess.

                              Comment


                                #35
                                Re: CDs make me sick

                                Better watch out it doesn't contain viruses...
                                "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                -David VanHorn

                                Comment


                                  #36
                                  Re: CDs make me sick

                                  I had a spindle of TDK go bad on me the cdr when only a thirrd were used. It was making one coaster after another and i thought maybe my burner was messed up. So i put in DRdr and it worked perfectly fine. So they went bad with age or some thing just sitting around or indirect sunlight.

                                  Don't really understand how since they were just sitting there. Meanwhile my music cd's sitting in a very hot truck for years and years still work perfectly.

                                  Comment


                                    #37
                                    Re: CDs make me sick

                                    I was after XP Home SP3.

                                    First I tried a retail copy, which didn't work at all.

                                    I'm currently downloading an OEM copy. Hope this one works okay.

                                    Regarding the discs themselves, you basically can't get high quality CD-Rs these days. Most people want CHEAP, and the only way to get that is by sacrificing quality. Kodak used to be top quality but they don't make their own discs anymore.

                                    Earlier on I ended up using a DVD-R for Ophcrack as I didn't have a CD-R at the time. So far as I know, it still works fine. DVDs have the data layer in the middle rather than on top, which makes them harder to completely wreck. I'm guessing they're also higher quality than CD-Rs.
                                    Last edited by Shocker; 06-10-2012, 07:22 PM.

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                                      #38
                                      Re: CDs make me sick

                                      find an OEM disc of any SP, make a .iso of it (or get an untouched uncracked/hacked torrent) and slipstream sp3 onto it. I created an sp3 pro disk that uses pre-sp2 OEM codes that way using an xp pro sp0 OEM torrent (I also added a required RAID driver while I was at it).
                                      sigpic

                                      (Insert witty quote here)

                                      Comment


                                        #39
                                        Re: CDs make me sick

                                        I've been using Memorex CDRs and Memorex DVDRs lately. Not a single bad burn, using either Toast, Nero, or PowerISO's default settings And that's on a wide variety of burners of various ages in various laptops and desktops...
                                        My friend buys TDK at Costco and those seem perfectly reliable as well...
                                        I don't know who actually made them, but they work, so I don't care!

                                        Really the only media I've had issues with were HP-branded. About half of them turned into coasters!

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                                          #40
                                          Re: CDs make me sick

                                          I don't like having to replace optical drives constantly. I replace more optical drives than any other part of a computer.

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