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JimH JimH is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 247
Default Affordable Charts? Finally?


Eisboch wrote:
Gene Kearns wrote in message
...
On Tue, 24 Oct 2006 12:19:51 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:


"Calif Bill" wrote in message
thlink.net...



Burned CD's can change. The reason being the construction. The
critical
part of a CD is not the clear side but the shiny side. A pressed CD has
the dimples pressed in and then the coating is applied, and the distance
from the surface to the reflective coating does not change. A burned
CD,
diffuses an internal material. If heat and chemistry happen, that
diffusion can grow or change. The reason a CD works is the light source
is reflected from the shiny coating or the diffused internal area. The
diffused or dimple is 1/2 wave length in depth, so you get a
cancellation
of light. A dark spot. If there is damage to the reflective surface,
then bad data.



I read at some point in time:

A burned CD has an approximate storage life of only 3 years before it can
start having data errors simply due to aging. They are not recommended
for
long term storage of important documents or files.

Interestingly, magnetic media (tapes) have an estimated data storage life
of
approximately 100 years.

Eisboch


http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/200...runc_sys.shtml



I think they are talking about commercial originals. The ones you create on
your CD or DVD burner on your computer (CD-R, DVD-RW) are the ones that have
a much shorter data storage life, according to what I read. I have some
homemade CDs that are a few years old though .... and they still work. I
think ..... (haven't used them in a while)

Eisboch



Same here. I have never had a CD that I burnt fail yet, although I do
have to clean them once in a while after being handled a lot.

What theoretically is supposed to happen to the data burnt onto CD's
over time?