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Re: CD-ROMs on open shelves in libraries -Reply
I believe that the issue of packaging to be used for storage and/or circulation
of CDS can be helped by
referring to the recently approved ANSI standard on storage of optical discs
(OPTICAL DISC MEDIA --
STORAGE)(ANSI IT9.25-1997) and the soon to be balloted AES version of the same
document, developed jointly
by the Audio Engineering Society's Standards Committee's Subcommittee on the
Preservation and Restoration
of Audio Recordings (AESSC SC03) and the National Association of Photographic
Manufacturers Technical
Committee IT9 (Optical Properties and Permanence of Imaging Materials). The
standard was developed over a
number of years, with active participation and review by both developers and
manufacturers of optical discs,
as well as by the library and archival world. Specifically concerning packing
design, the standard states:
".... Containers [for optical disc media] shall be designed in such a way that
the disc is suspended so that the
disc surface is not contacting the container when the container is stored in its
proper vertical position...."
Clearly, this excludes the sleeve suggested by one application.
The standard continues with information on types of materials that are to be
used (plastics such as polystyrene,
polypropylene, and polycarbonate are identified) and those which are to be
avoided (specifically cited are
paper, cardboard, foam rubber, and plastics such as celulosics, PVC, and highly
plasticized materials), as well
as the general design of the case. Other topics addressed in the standard are
environment (including
temperature, humidity, magnetic fields, and gaseous impurities), shelving,
handling, labeling, acclimatization,
fire protection, inspection, and cleaning.
I recommend that this standard be carefully reviewed if the life of the disc is
of concern (and this includes the
5-year life cited in some of the recent postings about alternative packaging for
circulating materials).
Unfortunately, CDS are not as impervious to damage, scratching, dirt, and the
environment as we would like to
believe, or as some manufacturers have suggested.
Gerald Gibson
Chair, AESSC SC03
Co-Chair ANSI IT9-5
Audio and Moving-Image Preservation Specialist
Preservation Research and Testing Division
Library of Congress
Washington, D.C. 20540-4560
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I had an idea ...gotten from the meeting at LC on those pesky
accompanying materials. I thought that since we at the Library of
Medicine are going to be using a book measuring device/ with computer
to create acid-free boxes for brittle books.[There is a the same
device and machine to create the box at LC.] why not use this for
modern books with accompanying materials . since the device which
creates a fold-openable acid-free phase box to the exact dimensions of
the volume---why not increase the dimensions of the box to include and
aded dimension of the thickness for a CD-ROM jewel box, computer disc
box, etc [ones of course that meets preservation Ansi standards] and
then pva glue the jewel box/ computer disc box to the top of the box-
-- thus when the box is opened-- on one side of the box, the patron
whould have the volume, and on the other side of the box, the patron
would have the accompanying CD-ROM Disc in its jewel box...the
materials would not be separated / one could use the German made
locking device on the CD_ROM [talked about at LC] if theft is likely,
and the box containing the volume+CD-ROM could be placed on the shelf
with a label...and you could label the jewel box not the disc -
inside the box.
Equally if the library receives serials with accompanying materials-
the serials could be bound with errata noting which serial had an
accompanying disc - a box created to hold the bound set of serials and
the accompanying materials .
just an idea -c-