|  | Posted by stocksami@earthlink.net on 02/12/07 00:18 
On Feb 6, 1:46 am, Charlie+ <char...@xxx.net> wrote:> On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 14:38:07 GMT, Eamon Skelton <Xnos...@oceanfree.net> wrote as
 > underneath my scribble :
 >
 > Hi Eamon
 > The faults vary from recoverable (with recovery software) errors to one disk
 > witha few unreadable errors - all the 16X disks are still mountable at this
 > time.
 > Thanks for your observations as to recording speeds - yes,  for sometime now I
 > have been buying only 8X speed disks and then recording at the write strategy
 > speed (4X) this would seem to be the safest for longevity but I have had no
 > failures under this regime yet.
 > If you read my OP carefully, you should be wary with your own method as some of
 > these 16X disks I recorded at 4X 8X and 16X and I am getting errors at all
 > recording speeds and this after only one year.
 > Media I use is always bulk drums but I check compatibility when I get a new drum
 > that the disks give perfect recordings with minimal error correction from the
 > drives (NEC).  I would expect more longevity from branded disks but the ones I
 > have tested to destruction with heat and UV light have been no better than the
 > bulk, ( I havnt tested any archival rated disks as they are so expensive to use
 > in bulk)  also you still get disks with visible flaws in the branded versions.
 > Please avoid interspersed posting, it is very confusing for other readers!
 
 I would distinguish between miscellaneous stuff and irreplaceable
 items like family videos.  For the REALLY important stuff I would
 invest in the higher priced disks that are promoted as archival
 quality.  There are several varieties and they aren't all that
 expensive for things of great importance.  I purchased some MAM-A GOLD
 DVD-R for family videos.  It might be worthwhile to do some
 destructive testing of disks such as these to see if they do indeed
 hold up better.
  Navigation: [Reply to this message] |