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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

I recently redid my office system moving my original High School/college system
into the office. Original Large Advents driven by a Sansui AU6500. Sounds
great compared to the crap I had in the small room. I had a bunch of CDRs I had
burned for work (headphones on my PC) but my not so new anymore IBM desktop has
a nice disk drive sync'd buzz in the sound out so I never listen. Anyway the
stack of generic "Office Depot" CDRs sat on my desk for a couple of years seeing
nothing but office flourescent and cool AC. They're still yellowing just a tad.
I brought 'em home and tried in my office on an AMC CD9 player....sounds like
dirty vinyl. All scratchy etc. I went through half the stack and finally
toward the middle they started to be almost playable. Then I tossed one in my PC
DVD drive (PC is hooked up for net radio) and it plays fine. Now I know when I
burned these things 2 years ago they played on the AMC. I'm really losing
faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.

BTW, I dumped the AMC in my main system for a Panasonic RP-91 with the hotly
disputed (on RAHE anyway) remaster feature. I use it on 3, just sounds smoother
to me.

ScottW


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MiNe 109 MiNe 109 is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

In article ,
"ScottW" wrote:

cdrs

BTW, I dumped the AMC in my main system for a Panasonic RP-91 with the hotly
disputed (on RAHE anyway) remaster feature. I use it on 3, just sounds
smoother
to me.


Some dude a ways back reported on RAO that an AMC CD9 failed his CDR
test. Googling brought up a Soundstage review that found fault tracking
test discs and scratched cds.

I've never had a problem like that with my CD8, but I think it may be a
completely different mechanism.

That Panasonic sounds like fun. You used to have to spend big bucks on
high end Sony or Wadia for switchable filters.

Stephen
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John Atkinson John Atkinson is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

On Jun 4, 10:00 pm, "ScottW" wrote:
I know when I burned these things 2 years ago they played on
the AMC. I'm really losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Has the AMC had heavy use in the intervening time? It's possible
that the read laser has lost enough power to making tracking
marginal with the lower-reflectivity CD-Rs. Realignment of the
mechanism might make it perform properly again.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile


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Arny Krueger Arny Krueger is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

"ScottW" wrote in message


I recently redid my office system moving my original High
School/college system into the office. Original Large
Advents driven by a Sansui AU6500. Sounds great compared
to the crap I had in the small room. I had a bunch of
CDRs I had burned for work (headphones on my PC) but my
not so new anymore IBM desktop has a nice disk drive
sync'd buzz in the sound out so I never listen. Anyway
the stack of generic "Office Depot" CDRs sat on my desk
for a couple of years seeing nothing but office
flourescent and cool AC. They're still yellowing just a
tad. I brought 'em home and tried in my office on an AMC
CD9 player....sounds like dirty vinyl. All scratchy etc.


Moral of the story - the AMC that you have is not optimal for playing CDRs.
Given the current pricing of optical disc players, this is hardly a major
issue. Out with the old and in with the new!

I went through half the stack and finally toward the
middle they started to be almost playable. Then I tossed
one in my PC DVD drive (PC is hooked up for net radio)
and it plays fine. Now I know when I burned these things
2 years ago they played on the AMC. I'm really losing
faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Either the CDRs degraded or the player degraded or both. Your storage
methodology for the CDRs is the pits. It is well-known that CDRs are
sensitive to light and should be stored in a dark, cool, dry place.

Here's a quick experiment. Take a regular pressed CD you can sacrifice and a
CDR with music on it that you can sacrifice, and put them outside, say on a
clothes line or something like it. Take 'em down in a week and try to play
them both. The CDR will probably be trash, and the pressed CD will probably
be fine.

BTW, I dumped the AMC in my main system for a Panasonic
RP-91 with the hotly disputed (on RAHE anyway) remaster
feature. I use it on 3, just sounds smoother to me.


Newer players are designed to get the most that they can out of CDRs. It's a
survival issue for the manufacturers - any optical player that is in
warranty and can't do a good job with CDRs and DVDRs is going to have a lot
of returns in warranty. Those all come out of the manufacturer's pocket, and
tick off the retailers, not to mention the consumers.


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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

On Jun 5, 4:00 am, John Atkinson
wrote:
On Jun 4, 10:00 pm, "ScottW" wrote:

I know when I burned these things 2 years ago they played on
the AMC. I'm really losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Has the AMC had heavy use in the intervening time?


I wouldn't consider it heavy.. but hard to quantify.
2 to 3 hundred hours would be my guess.

It's possible
that the read laser has lost enough power to making tracking
marginal with the lower-reflectivity CD-Rs. Realignment of the
mechanism might make it perform properly again.


It works fine on CDs and brand new CDRs.
Its not worth putting any money into.
I've a Pioneer universal I can swap out if using the PC as a player
becomes annoying. 90% of the time when I'm in the office I'm on
the computer anyway.

thanks for your comments,

ScottW





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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

On Jun 5, 6:36 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"ScottW" wrote in message



I recently redid my office system moving my original High
School/college system into the office. Original Large
Advents driven by a Sansui AU6500. Sounds great compared
to the crap I had in the small room. I had a bunch of
CDRs I had burned for work (headphones on my PC) but my
not so new anymore IBM desktop has a nice disk drive
sync'd buzz in the sound out so I never listen. Anyway
the stack of generic "Office Depot" CDRs sat on my desk
for a couple of years seeing nothing but office
flourescent and cool AC. They're still yellowing just a
tad. I brought 'em home and tried in my office on an AMC
CD9 player....sounds like dirty vinyl. All scratchy etc.


Moral of the story - the AMC that you have is not optimal for playing CDRs.
Given the current pricing of optical disc players, this is hardly a major
issue. Out with the old and in with the new!


I guess. I saw a big pallet of Panasonic S55s at Fryes for $89 ea.


I went through half the stack and finally toward the
middle they started to be almost playable. Then I tossed
one in my PC DVD drive (PC is hooked up for net radio)
and it plays fine. Now I know when I burned these things
2 years ago they played on the AMC. I'm really losing
faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Either the CDRs degraded or the player degraded or both.


I'm pretty sure the CDR

Your storage
methodology for the CDRs is the pits. It is well-known that CDRs are
sensitive to light and should be stored in a dark, cool, dry place.


I know sunlight kills but Office flourescent?
Hmmm, you gave me a product idea. I need CD cases without
clear cases. I haven't seen any out there.

ScottW


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George M. Middius George M. Middius is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?



Witless barked:

Office flourescent?


Pigsty wunderlast!




--

Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence.
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Clyde Slick Clyde Slick is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?


Mrs. Krueger a scris:

Out with the old and in with the new!




. It is well-known that CDRs are
sensitive to light and should be stored in a dark, cool, dry place.


I store mine with my potatoes

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Arny Krueger Arny Krueger is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

"ScottW" wrote in message
ups.com
On Jun 5, 6:36 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"ScottW" wrote in message



I recently redid my office system moving my original
High School/college system into the office. Original
Large Advents driven by a Sansui AU6500. Sounds great
compared to the crap I had in the small room. I had a
bunch of CDRs I had burned for work (headphones on my
PC) but my not so new anymore IBM desktop has a nice
disk drive sync'd buzz in the sound out so I never
listen. Anyway the stack of generic "Office Depot"
CDRs sat on my desk for a couple of years seeing
nothing but office flourescent and cool AC. They're
still yellowing just a tad. I brought 'em home and
tried in my office on an AMC CD9 player....sounds like
dirty vinyl. All scratchy etc.


Moral of the story - the AMC that you have is not
optimal for playing CDRs. Given the current pricing of
optical disc players, this is hardly a major issue. Out
with the old and in with the new!


I guess. I saw a big pallet of Panasonic S55s at Fryes
for $89 ea.


I went through half the stack and finally toward the
middle they started to be almost playable. Then I tossed
one in my PC DVD drive (PC is hooked up for net radio)
and it plays fine. Now I know when I burned these
things 2 years ago they played on the AMC. I'm really
losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Either the CDRs degraded or the player degraded or both.


I'm pretty sure the CDR

Your storage
methodology for the CDRs is the pits. It is well-known
that CDRs are sensitive to light and should be stored in
a dark, cool, dry place.


I know sunlight kills but Office flourescent?


CDR s are known to be sensitive to UV light. Fluorescent lamps work by
means of a phosphor coating that converts UV to visible light. If the
phosphor coating is depleated, some UV may escape. Common phosphors don't
put out much UV, but they can put out quite a bit of light near the UV end
of the visible spectrum.

Hmmm, you gave me a product idea. I need CD cases without
clear cases. I haven't seen any out there.


Plastic usually absorbs UV quite well.


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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?

On Jun 5, 1:15 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"ScottW" wrote in message

ups.com





On Jun 5, 6:36 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"ScottW" wrote in message




I recently redid my office system moving my original
High School/college system into the office. Original
Large Advents driven by a Sansui AU6500. Sounds great
compared to the crap I had in the small room. I had a
bunch of CDRs I had burned for work (headphones on my
PC) but my not so new anymore IBM desktop has a nice
disk drive sync'd buzz in the sound out so I never
listen. Anyway the stack of generic "Office Depot"
CDRs sat on my desk for a couple of years seeing
nothing but office flourescent and cool AC. They're
still yellowing just a tad. I brought 'em home and
tried in my office on an AMC CD9 player....sounds like
dirty vinyl. All scratchy etc.


Moral of the story - the AMC that you have is not
optimal for playing CDRs. Given the current pricing of
optical disc players, this is hardly a major issue. Out
with the old and in with the new!


I guess. I saw a big pallet of Panasonic S55s at Fryes
for $89 ea.


I went through half the stack and finally toward the
middle they started to be almost playable. Then I tossed
one in my PC DVD drive (PC is hooked up for net radio)
and it plays fine. Now I know when I burned these
things 2 years ago they played on the AMC. I'm really
losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.


Either the CDRs degraded or the player degraded or both.


I'm pretty sure the CDR


Your storage
methodology for the CDRs is the pits. It is well-known
that CDRs are sensitive to light and should be stored in
a dark, cool, dry place.


I know sunlight kills but Office flourescent?


CDR s are known to be sensitive to UV light. Fluorescent lamps work by
means of a phosphor coating that converts UV to visible light. If the
phosphor coating is depleated, some UV may escape. Common phosphors don't
put out much UV, but they can put out quite a bit of light near the UV end
of the visible spectrum.

Hmmm, you gave me a product idea. I need CD cases without
clear cases. I haven't seen any out there.


Plastic usually absorbs UV quite well.


Well....my CDR which sat under flourescent light were in plastic
cases and still degraded.

ScottW



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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Default CDRs or AMC CD9?


"Soundhaspriority" wrote in message
news

"ScottW" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Jun 5, 4:00 am, John Atkinson
wrote:
On Jun 4, 10:00 pm, "ScottW" wrote:

I know when I burned these things 2 years ago they played on
the AMC. I'm really losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.

Has the AMC had heavy use in the intervening time?


Scott,
Years ago, Sony transports had the distinction of reading CD-RW, even those
manufactured before the release of CD-RW blanks. In the intervening
years,while other transports had trouble with "clear" CD-R blanks, and so
forth, the Sonys read everything.

What color is the dye of the problem CD-R's ?


Its a very light blue or turquoise.
Generic Office Depot brand.

ScottW


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ScottW ScottW is offline
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Posts: 3,253
Default CDRs or AMC CD9?


"Soundhaspriority" wrote in message
...

"ScottW" wrote in message
...

"Soundhaspriority" wrote in message
news

"ScottW" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Jun 5, 4:00 am, John Atkinson
wrote:
On Jun 4, 10:00 pm, "ScottW" wrote:

I know when I burned these things 2 years ago they played on
the AMC. I'm really losing faith in CDRs and a bit in the AMC.

Has the AMC had heavy use in the intervening time?

Scott,
Years ago, Sony transports had the distinction of reading CD-RW, even
those manufactured before the release of CD-RW blanks. In the intervening
years,while other transports had trouble with "clear" CD-R blanks, and so
forth, the Sonys read everything.

What color is the dye of the problem CD-R's ?


Its a very light blue or turquoise.
Generic Office Depot brand.

ScottW

They are easy to read. However, they are also the least stable, some extremely
unstable. So it does sound like an age problem. Note, however, that the deep
blue Verbatim disks use azo dye, are on the upper end of the stability
spectrum, and are also easy for mediocre laser mechanisms.

The colorless blanks, which are now the most common, also have highly stable
chemistry. But you would need to run some tests to ensure that your player can
handle them reliably.


Thanks for the info.
My current spindle is TDK, appear almost colorless, very slight hint of blue.
Hopefully they'll work. These CDs are all duplicates of stuff I own so
no real loss to me. I just hate having my collection scattered about the
house between 3 systems.

ScottW


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