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View Full Version : The Difference In Cd Blanks Companies



mikenmike0001
09-20-2003, 11:46 PM
hi, i'm curious, when it comes to blank cds, how do the qualities or lifespans differ from each company or brand or color? i just went to office max today cuz i heard there was a sale on a pack of imation cds for 9 bucks. when i opened it and looked at the "burned" side, it was just plainly clear color, which seemed odd becuase in the other brands that i have bought in the past (eg, memorex, gq, tdk) they all seemed to vary in color, light blue, dark blue, black , green, gold...etc... so i'm wondering, DOES IT REALLY MATTER!?!? i hear that certain colors can't be read by cd players and stuff and i noticed with the gq's that nomatter how slow i burn with them, i get all this static noises from my music for some reason. also, as far as the prices, sometimes it seems that it's too good to be true for some of the prices while others are far too expensive...what's your feedback on this? anyone using imation cds right now?

shn
09-20-2003, 11:54 PM
The color of a cd r doesnt make a difference. Its a stylish preference taken up by most cd makers. For instance, I like the ones that are all black even on the media side surface of the cd.

I dont know how many you got for 9 bucks. But at the office max where I live you can get a 50 pack of cd-r's for 5 dollars. The price is 10 but you get an instant 5 dollar rebate when they ring it up, thus, 5 bucks. :)

Illuminati
09-20-2003, 11:58 PM
AFAIK, the colour won't matter - the film is just there to reflect the laser to distinguish the 0s and 1s anyway, last time I heard.

Some colours, however, are deeply associated with certain uses of CDs (e.g. PS2 DVDs are known to have mainly blue-purple colours on them), but I think that's more a consistancy thing rather than technical.

Shame I can't help you with the Imation CDs though - I use Verbatim and Datawrite ;)

3rd gen noob
09-21-2003, 12:05 AM
i'm using white-topped discplanet cd-r's just now
had no coasters out of 70 or so, and i always burn at 52x...

as has been said, the colour shouldn't make a difference...

pol
09-21-2003, 12:13 AM
been using these emtec for a few months now for data, no duffers in over 250, come in drums of 50

http://www.tigerdirect.com/images/SKUimages/medium/E505-1014.jpg

zapjb
09-21-2003, 12:36 AM
I'm using Pine, they suck!

sparsely
09-21-2003, 02:42 AM
I always use Memorex. Plain white for music, silver for data/software.
No particular reason, but I get em pretty cheap, and once I find something that works I just stick with it....and I
like all my CDs to look the same.

Just recently, however, I got a mp3/CD player for my car, and I burned my mp3 discs for the car on Verbatim
Vinyl CD-Rs! They look just like little records, they're so cute! :P
http://common.ziffdavisinternet.com/util_get_image/1/0,3363,sz=1&i=18737,00.jpg

only bad part...almost no room to write on them.

Jay
09-21-2003, 02:44 AM
all of them r same to me

MUSLEMAN
09-21-2003, 02:50 AM
ive been told by nero and dvd x copy that verbatim is one of the good ones

LaVaNaNo
09-21-2003, 04:13 AM
I use memorex cdr's 2 30 packs. 52x multispeed. Really good cd's.

fkdup74
09-21-2003, 04:25 AM
ive had best results so far with sony, but they were pricy if i remember right (which i just might not........lol) TDK's are alright. how do those verbatims burn? i saw those and thought they looked pretty cool, but havent tried them yet.

psikoneo
09-21-2003, 04:44 AM
I use Imation or Memorex

not a single bad one yet

I also love using those Verbatim Vinyls when I make an audio only cd

MUSLEMAN
09-21-2003, 05:12 AM
Originally posted by FKDUP74@21 September 2003 - 00:25
ive had best results so far with sony, but they were pricy if i remember right (which i just might not........lol) TDK's are alright. how do those verbatims burn? i saw those and thought they looked pretty cool, but havent tried them yet.
verbatim has been great so far with both my cd-rw and my dvd+rw also i've had good experience with sony

mikenmike0001
09-21-2003, 06:11 AM
so what makes one good and one not good? that's what i'm asking.......thanks for the feedback guys.....can you trust those generic brands? and what's with the cdrw's? i seem to have problems with erasing and reburning them......they seem to not work well , and i thought you can reuse them forever...

MUSLEMAN
09-21-2003, 06:55 AM
Originally posted by mikenmike0001@21 September 2003 - 02:11
so what makes one good and one not good? that's what i'm asking.......thanks for the feedback guys.....can you trust those generic brands? and what's with the cdrw's? i seem to have problems with erasing and reburning them......they seem to not work well , and i thought you can reuse them forever...
i was told once you need to find what your brand of burner likes to use as far as what type. and your cd-rw are usable what is the problem with them?? remember after earsing them you need to format them

Kunal
09-21-2003, 09:40 AM
I Either Use Imation Or White Topped Ones.

mikenmike0001
09-26-2003, 06:54 AM
Originally posted by MUSLEMAN+20 September 2003 - 23:55--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (MUSLEMAN @ 20 September 2003 - 23:55)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-mikenmike0001@21 September 2003 - 02:11
so what makes one good and one not good?&nbsp; that&#39;s what i&#39;m asking.......thanks for the feedback guys.....can you trust those generic brands? and what&#39;s with the cdrw&#39;s? i seem to have problems with erasing and reburning them......they seem to not work well , and i thought you can reuse them forever...
i was told once you need to find what your brand of burner likes to use as far as what type. and your cd-rw are usable what is the problem with them?? remember after earsing them you need to format them [/b][/quote]
yeah....but i guess the memory of it isn&#39;t that long, cuz i remember formating and burning on a cdrw, then i brought it over to my friends computer and tried loading it on his cd drive and burner drive, but it couldn&#39;t read..........so i guess something is wrong with those cdrw&#39;s.and with cds in general, do the data that they hold have a lifespan? or is it premanent forever until the cd breaks?

MUSLEMAN
09-26-2003, 08:39 AM
Originally posted by mikenmike0001+26 September 2003 - 02:54--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (mikenmike0001 @ 26 September 2003 - 02:54)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'>
Originally posted by MUSLEMAN@20 September 2003 - 23:55
<!--QuoteBegin-mikenmike0001@21 September 2003 - 02:11
so what makes one good and one not good? that&#39;s what i&#39;m asking.......thanks for the feedback guys.....can you trust those generic brands? and what&#39;s with the cdrw&#39;s? i seem to have problems with erasing and reburning them......they seem to not work well , and i thought you can reuse them forever...
i was told once you need to find what your brand of burner likes to use as far as what type. and your cd-rw are usable what is the problem with them?? remember after earsing them you need to format them
yeah....but i guess the memory of it isn&#39;t that long, cuz i remember formating and burning on a cdrw, then i brought it over to my friends computer and tried loading it on his cd drive and burner drive, but it couldn&#39;t read..........so i guess something is wrong with those cdrw&#39;s.and with cds in general, do the data that they hold have a lifespan? or is it premanent forever until the cd breaks? [/b][/quote]
i think your friend did not have the program needed to read your cd boss :lol: