Subject: Damaged CDs
A member of the Ohio University community recently approached the preservation department with a query about a collection of CDs which were apparently damaged during shipment from India to the United States. The music was purchased in the USA between 1989 and 1992 and played fine. The owner shipped the 120-item collection to India (presumably in 1992) and had no problem. A year ago, the CDs were returned to the US and it was then that the problem was discovered. According to the owner the entire collection has been damaged beyond use. Attempts to play the CDs resulted in his being able to hear the first part of the music followed by "skipping". He describes the items as having a fungicidal growth or coating and a peeling of the metallic foil around the edges and centre of the disc. Jai is a photographer and has seen similar growth on slides. Most of the CDs are labels such as Phillips, Archive, Ouise L'lyre, Columbia, Telarc, and Deutche Gramaphone; however, Phillips and DG labels are the most severely effected. Jai is considering contacting the manufacturers/distributors concerning this problem. In the meantime, I am also trying to find some answers. Has anyone on the list experienced similar problems with CDs? Might this fungus (or whatever the growth is) be as a result of moisture build-up in the packaging? (the owner wrapped 10-15 CDs, per package, in plastic wrap & foam and then placed in mailing cardboard boxes; additional foam was used inside the box to minimize movement of the CD packages). The same method of packing was employed to ship the CDs from the US to India and the results were fine, which leads us to believe that packaging is not a part of the problem. Even though Jai's collection has been ruined this issue may well come up again. Any comments, suggestions will be appreciated. Thanks. Patricia Smith Head, Preservation Department Ohio University *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:41 Distributed: Thursday, December 1, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-41-007 ***Received on Tuesday, 29 November, 1994