Do CD-RWs Wear Out?

Anything about MUSIC but doesn't fit into the forums above.
RELATED
PRODUCTS

Post

I would have thought that the media itself would be more reliable written at slower speeds,irrespective of the drive, having more time to recieve the data etc - that's certainly my experience. CDRW's written at high speed tend to be unreadable in several of my machines...
THIS IS MY MUSIC: https://spti.fi/rZyjX7i :phones:

Post

I remember reading something about how the dye (?) used in CDRWs wears out quicker if it doesn't get... sunlight. Does anyone know more details about this, including whether it's a all a big lie or not?
Thing is... you've got to balance it so that you keep the dye happy w/o melting the CD... tsk!
We can conclude that the DCT of a pizza doesn’t resemble anything edible.

Post

Doogle wrote:I remember reading something about how the dye (?) used in CDRWs wears out quicker if it doesn't get... sunlight. Does anyone know more details about this, including whether it's a all a big lie or not?
Thing is... you've got to balance it so that you keep the dye happy w/o melting the CD... tsk!
CDRWs use a metal mix (silver, indium, antimony, tellurium), not a dye. Opposed to CD-Rs, they are not prone to degradation through UV rays.

To answer the question of the original poster: CDRWs only survive a few hundred write cycles before getting erronious. If you use packet writing with a tool like In-CD, these few hundred cycles can be reached pretty quickly. This depends also on the recorder and its firmware. Some of them perform a better packet writing strategy (using the whole space on the CDRW before overwriting a section again...)


@ ResonantOrder: The link you gave is about CD-R. Also a few other comments in this thread (sunlight...) applies more to CD-R than CD-RW.


kybernaut

Post

Off topic a bit, since the question was about CDRW's, but worth mentioning:

The best CDRs I know of are Mitsui Mam-A Gold. I wouldn't burn long-term backups to anything else... (certainly not to CDRWS...)

Mam-a discs use a proprietary phythalocyanine dye, which lasts something like 200 years in typical storage conditions.. cheapie cyanine discs will probably last 25 years... maybe less if you leave them out exposed to daylight (uv radiation).

http://www.mam-a.com/

-Garret

Post

I guess I should learn to read...:P

If your serious about storage, never use a cd-rw.

Post

Try using something other than Brillo pads to clean them..

Post

DELETED

Post

Man... I have tapes that are 25 years old & they still work fine. I hope my CDrs will last as long! :)
I think as long as you take care of your stuff it will last.

Post

Well if they do end up all messed up, pop 'em in the microwave for a few seconds...good times...

Post Reply

Return to “Everything Else (Music related)”