05-08-2003, 07:14 AM | #1 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Leeds, UK
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cd-rw media?
I have a 32x12x40x cd rewriter and was wondering what you find is the best blank cd type/brand out there?
At the moment i buy BenQ 48x CD-R's at £11.49 for 50. Good deal?
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Why's Snoop Dog carry an umbrella? Fo' Drizzle |
05-08-2003, 12:59 PM | #8 (permalink) |
Über-Rookie
Location: No longer, D.C
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just dont buy PNY.. Most others work fine.. and be wary of Verbatims.. I bought several verbatims and they work great for me, but when my friend tries to read any of them in his Sony CD-RW he can't.. It doesnt even recognize there is a disc in the drive.
but PNY's are just crap.
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"All that we can do is just survive. .All that we can do to help ourselves is stay alive." - Rush |
05-08-2003, 03:46 PM | #11 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: North Hollywood
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i bought a spindle of office depot branded cdrs and every other one was a coaster was for a 48x burn though, the cds were rated higher though, possibly a bad batch.
then got some el cheapos from compusa/frys and so far no problems, aint' italways the way.. though since you are in the iom i doubt youll be buying at comp usa, frys or office depot, dixons maybe ? |
05-08-2003, 08:54 PM | #12 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Plugged In
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Most CDRs are made by one of four or so manufacturers, but are just rebranded.
Check out this little program that tells you who really made it: ** EDIT ** Forget the URL I posted earlier, it was a version that was way out of date. Use this one: http://www.terra.es/personal8/tinnin/CDRIdentifier.zip You'll be suprised. I've had cheapo no-name spindles have the same manufacturer as brand name ones. BTW, I think the program requires a blank disc (i.e. you can't use one that's been burned to) Last edited by Boner; 05-08-2003 at 09:05 PM.. |
05-11-2003, 06:55 PM | #15 (permalink) |
Not so great lurker
Location: NY
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For the most part, other than the rebate stuff, I normally use some cheap khypermedia blanks, they are usually cheaper then most other brands and usually come from the same manufacturer that tdk, imation, etc use.
If you really need good quality blanks, you should go for ones made by Taiyo Yuden, they are considered to be some of the best cd-r blanks you can get. I know that Fuji and That's cdr both use this manufacturer, other than that you might need to do some more research. As has also been said before, it comes down to preference and what brand your burner has less problems with (some burners have no problems with anything thrown at them). This is a link to a post that may help you you understand about cd-r media. http://club.cdfreaks.com/showthread.php?threadid=61943 If you can't get to it, i'll post it so that you can read it. |
05-13-2003, 07:53 AM | #19 (permalink) |
Lord over all I survey
Location: Northern Michigan
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I have used many type of CDr as well as DVD+R media as I burn a lot for work.. I'm over 6000 CD/DVD (used for archiving artwork - as tape is too slow) and 2+terabytes is a huge amount to deal with. Anyway I've recently started buying cheap meadia for both like $.19 CDs and $DVD+R @ $1.69ea and find them to be equilivent to the higer end stuff.
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05-14-2003, 08:09 PM | #20 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Over here
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I'm presently working on the first of two 200-packs of "Prime Peripherals" discs that I got at OfficeMax with a freebate.
I have two PlexWriters, a Samsung, and a Yamaha. I have had ONE coaster thus far, which an attempt at an audio disc, too fast, on a slow PC. |
Tags |
cdrw, media |
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