Prefered Blank CD's ?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Dennis Detweiler
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- Joined: 8 Dec 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Solon, Iowa, US
Prefered Blank CD's ?
Need input for those that have had trial and error with CD recording, which is your prefered brand of empty CD's for recording?
Thanks
Thanks
1976 Birdseye U-12 MSA with Telonics 427 pickup, 1975 Birdseye U-12 MSA with Telonics X-12 pickup, Revelation preamp, Ibanez Analog Mini Delay and Hall Of Fame Reverb, Crown XLS 1002, 2- 15" Eminence Wheelhouse speakers, ShoBud Pedal, Effects Pedals. 1949 Epiphone D-8.
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Leroy Golden
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- Location: Muskegon, Michigan, USA
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Jack Stoner
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- Location: Kansas City, MO
Avoid Memorex. On the Dell Users forum, we see more CD burning problems related to Memorex than any other brand. I use Verbatim that I buy at Sam's Club and have never had a problem with them.
One note, if you are going to burn Audio CD's, keep the burn speed low, so the CD's will be compatible with any audio CD player. I use 8X as my burn "Standard". Also NEVER use paper labels.
One note, if you are going to burn Audio CD's, keep the burn speed low, so the CD's will be compatible with any audio CD player. I use 8X as my burn "Standard". Also NEVER use paper labels.
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Andy Sandoval
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Jack Stoner
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- Location: Kansas City, MO
Nothing wrong with the recording. However, many audio CD players (especially older ones and the in-dash CD players in cars up to about 2002) have problems playing audio CD's that are burned at high speed. On some players they will skip and on others they will not play at all or only some tracks will play. We did a lot of experimenting and found that 12X was a "safe" speed for most but ocasionally there were still some playing problems on some older and the low end equipment. Burning at 8X assured they would play on 99.9% without problems.
If you are only burning them for your own equipment and your equipment will play the CD's burned at high speed, no problem. However, I sell my instrumental CD's at concerts and who knows what they will be played on, so to be safe I use the 8X burn speed.
If you are only burning them for your own equipment and your equipment will play the CD's burned at high speed, no problem. However, I sell my instrumental CD's at concerts and who knows what they will be played on, so to be safe I use the 8X burn speed.
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Brad Sarno
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- Joined: 18 Dec 2000 1:01 am
- Location: St. Louis, MO USA
Taiyo Yuden is THE brand the pro's choose, hands down. You may have to get them on line. They're not that much more expensive, and they are by far the most reliable.
I'll second what Jack said about paper labels. Not only can they cause jam-up problems, but they can also throw a spinning disk out of balance which can be very bad regarding readability. Also agreed on the burn speeds Jack mentioned. 12x is a good safe speed in general. With the Taiyo Yudens in a Plextor Premium burner, 8x has shown to be a very good, perhaps the best, low error burn rate. Super slow burning (like 1x or 2x) is not always a good idea even though it seems like it would be. There are other issues like overburning due to laser strength at slow speeds, especially with todays fast burners.
The problem with super fast burns is that the data can get sloppily burned with regards to the timing (jitter) as well as the integrity and detectability of each burned pit (the ones and zeroes). It may actually be quite readable by a computer for data, but audio can be less detectable by some CD players. Good blank disks made at good burn speeds will make reliable disks nearly every time.
Brad
www.bluejadeaudio.com
I'll second what Jack said about paper labels. Not only can they cause jam-up problems, but they can also throw a spinning disk out of balance which can be very bad regarding readability. Also agreed on the burn speeds Jack mentioned. 12x is a good safe speed in general. With the Taiyo Yudens in a Plextor Premium burner, 8x has shown to be a very good, perhaps the best, low error burn rate. Super slow burning (like 1x or 2x) is not always a good idea even though it seems like it would be. There are other issues like overburning due to laser strength at slow speeds, especially with todays fast burners.
The problem with super fast burns is that the data can get sloppily burned with regards to the timing (jitter) as well as the integrity and detectability of each burned pit (the ones and zeroes). It may actually be quite readable by a computer for data, but audio can be less detectable by some CD players. Good blank disks made at good burn speeds will make reliable disks nearly every time.
Brad
www.bluejadeaudio.com
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Jack Stoner
- Posts: 22146
- Joined: 3 Dec 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Kansas City, MO
Ernie, the only difference in the "Audio" CD's and regular "Data" CD's is that the Audio CD's have a special identifier track on them that the older standalone CD burners needed or they would not burn. This was a concession to the music industry to allow standalone auido CD burning. There is no other difference.
ALL audio on CD's is "Digital" so "Digial CD blanks" is just some marketing ploy. It means nothing.
ALL audio on CD's is "Digital" so "Digial CD blanks" is just some marketing ploy. It means nothing.
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Gordy Hall
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Jack Stoner
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- Location: Kansas City, MO
What brand of Lightscribe are you using? I've seen several brands including HP and Memorex. Some DVD players like DVD-R or DVD+R better than the other.
I use an Epson ink jet printer that prints full color labels in under 2 minutes. A lot better than the up to 30 minutes for a full lightscribe label and it's in full color not the one color you are limited to with Lightscribe.
I use an Epson ink jet printer that prints full color labels in under 2 minutes. A lot better than the up to 30 minutes for a full lightscribe label and it's in full color not the one color you are limited to with Lightscribe.
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Michael McGee
- Posts: 922
- Joined: 8 Dec 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Everton, Missouri, USA
I get TY's here because they are down the street from where I work:Brad Sarno wrote:Taiyo Yuden is THE brand the pro's choose, hands down. You may have to get them on line. They're not that much more expensive, and they are by far the most reliable.
I'll second what Jack said about paper labels. Not only can they cause jam-up problems, but they can also throw a spinning disk out of balance which can be very bad regarding readability. Also agreed on the burn speeds Jack mentioned. 12x is a good safe speed in general. With the Taiyo Yudens in a Plextor Premium burner, 8x has shown to be a very good, perhaps the best, low error burn rate. Super slow burning (like 1x or 2x) is not always a good idea even though it seems like it would be. There are other issues like overburning due to laser strength at slow speeds, especially with todays fast burners.
The problem with super fast burns is that the data can get sloppily burned with regards to the timing (jitter) as well as the integrity and detectability of each burned pit (the ones and zeroes). It may actually be quite readable by a computer for data, but audio can be less detectable by some CD players. Good blank disks made at good burn speeds will make reliable disks nearly every time.
Brad
www.bluejadeaudio.com
http://nationalaudiocompany.com/
but if you can't find TY's locally, you can order online.
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John McClung
- Posts: 5165
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Olympia WA, USA
Jack Stoner, is the "Music CD" nomenclature also just marketing? I usually buy those since I'm burning mostly music to disc.
Anyone recommend a superior brand of printable blank discs? My new Epson printer can print on the disc, so I'm going to want to do that henceforth (and forthwith, I might add...and I do).

Anyone recommend a superior brand of printable blank discs? My new Epson printer can print on the disc, so I'm going to want to do that henceforth (and forthwith, I might add...and I do).
E9 INSTRUCTION
If you want to have an ongoing discussion, please email me, don't use the Forum messaging which I detest! steelguitarlessons@earthlink.net
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Jack Stoner
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- Joined: 3 Dec 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Kansas City, MO
As noted, the "music CD's" are CD blanks that have a special track on them that is needed by most older standalone audio CD recorders (I don't know about new ones). This was a concession to the music industry as the industry gets a certain amount of money for each "music CD" that is sold.
If you are making audio CD's on a computer you do not need these higher priced CD blanks. Just standard "data" CD-R is all that is needed.
If you are making audio CD's on a computer you do not need these higher priced CD blanks. Just standard "data" CD-R is all that is needed.
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Dennis Detweiler
- Posts: 3916
- Joined: 8 Dec 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Solon, Iowa, US
Sideline topic:
I can't get the finalizer to work on my Fostex CR300. Any suggestions? I'm awaiting word from Fostex online support.
Update: I bought it used. The manual neglected to inform the need to double click the go button. Asian to English glitch in translation? Problem solved.
I can't get the finalizer to work on my Fostex CR300. Any suggestions? I'm awaiting word from Fostex online support.
Update: I bought it used. The manual neglected to inform the need to double click the go button. Asian to English glitch in translation? Problem solved.
1976 Birdseye U-12 MSA with Telonics 427 pickup, 1975 Birdseye U-12 MSA with Telonics X-12 pickup, Revelation preamp, Ibanez Analog Mini Delay and Hall Of Fame Reverb, Crown XLS 1002, 2- 15" Eminence Wheelhouse speakers, ShoBud Pedal, Effects Pedals. 1949 Epiphone D-8.