Posted by Joseph Kewfi on 10/03/71 11:39
>Does the writer simply ignore this and move onto the next part of
> the disc? What happens when the dust is cleaned off? Is the DVD simply
read
> as normal, ignoring these unwritten areas?
Keep dust off of blank DVD's before you write to them. If your blanks are
dirty then the dirt will prevent the laser from burning into the dye
properly and the resulting disc will have areas of data dropout. Depending
on how dirty the blank is, a little dust caused data dropout will be
corrected by the player's error correction system. A lot of dirt will render
the disc unplayable.
"Marcus Fox" <please-reply-via-newsgroup-th@-i-posted-to.com> wrote in
message news:wTwFf.12363$K42.1047@newsfe7-win.ntli.net...
> It occurs to me that when you write a DVD in your DVD writer that the DVD
> that you place in the machine may have small particles of dust on some
parts
> of it. This dust would then block the laser from writing on these parts of
> the DVD. Does the writer simply ignore this and move onto the next part of
> the disc? What happens when the dust is cleaned off? Is the DVD simply
read
> as normal, ignoring these unwritten areas?
>
> Marcus
>
>
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