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Re: [ARSCLIST] CD-R question
Tom Fine wrote:
So then no one really knows if 80's are less reliable? If this
"reliability" issue is mythology, why is so common on this forum? I ask
because 650 meg media is becoming somewhat rare and oftem much more
costly. If there is no proven advantage then it is silly to insist on
it, as some clients do.
No. We know that they have higher error rates and are harder to read
than equivalent 74s. We know that high error rates and poor readability
typically precede failure in typical discs. But I know of no stronger
reason to believe that 80s are less reliable than 74s.
To save a separate thread, some notes may be in order on the standard
lengths. The standard for pitch on the spiral of a CD leads to 74
minutes' recording time. Manufacturing tolerances being what they were
two decades back, tolerance on the pitch demanded that the player handle
pitches corresponding to 63 through 80 minutes. More than a decade ago,
TDK offered an 80-minute CD-R at prohibitive cost; it lasted some time
in the catalogue, but was unavailable in practice.
Any longer blank is out of spec. Indeed, it may be argued that any over
74 minutes is out of spec.
Mike
--
mrichter@xxxxxxx
http://www.mrichter.com/