Hi where can you find the taiyo brand of blank cd r disks and about how much
of them do you get when you purchase them?
Casey
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ray" <[email protected]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 8:18 AM
Subject: Re: are there noticable differences in blank cds?
Firstly, if we're talking about the quality and consistency of blank cds,
then
the make does make a difference. I now use Taiyo Yuden blanks and these
seem
to play on just about everything I've got around the place, including
cheapo
boom boxes. I think that Data Safe which is another brand name, uses
Taiyo
Yuden coating and these have turned out to be good too.
I usually duplicate at 16x which is said to be the highest speed you can
burn
audio Cds reliably, but I have doubled the speed ocasionally but you could
end
up getting some cds coming back from those who cannot play them on
equimpment
less forgiving of errors.
As for "audio cds" this of course was the scheme introduced in the 90s by
Sony, and others, where hardware CD recorders and duplicators would only
accept audio cds which have a code burnt into them so as they're
recogniszedrecognized as legitimate, i.e. you are playing the game
according
to the record companies rules.
there are of course stand alone Cd copiers that will take computer Cd roms
for
audio as well as data copying.
CD copiers though are never going to be 100 per cent reliable as compared
with
CDs turned out by plants using glass masters, but you have to be doing
long
runs of cds to justify the cost of pro duplication.
Ray
Gary Schindler wrote:
There is a difference of CD types. if you use a stand alone audio cd
recorder you will find out quickly that a data cd can't be used in it.
sometime when you burn a data cd for music on a computer, it will be
scratchy sounding and must be recorded or dubbed at a slower speed. if
you
use a cd copier made by alysis or something, you can get away with
recording
on data discs.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Glen Jan" <[email protected]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 1:28 AM
Subject: Re: are there noticable differences in blank cds?
Vinny,
The only difference between the various CD-R brands is their quality and
here is no such thing in reality as a CD-R specifically for music. Such
claims should be dealt with.
Once you enter the digital domain, zeros and ones and just that, zeros
and
ones.
If your CD-R comes from a poor manufacturing line, than you'll have
problems.
Lots of people use Taiyo Youden CD-R and DVD-R with good results and they
have regularly gotten good reviews over a long period of time.
HTH.
Glen
At 04:07 pm 6-10-2009, you wrote:
Hi,
When purchasing blank cdrs, the manufactures distinguish between cdrs,
and
cdrs for music. I have always used regular cds for burning and ripping.
Are there differences, does one sound better, last longer, etc.?
Thanks.
Vinny
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