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On Jun 15, 2009, at 11:48 AM, Laura Conrad wrote: > It's the same batch I used for the recovery disks for my current > laptop. Do they go bad after a couple of years? Recordable optical media can, yes, indeed, go bad. At the heart of the matter is the organic dyes used in the recording layer. Commercially pressed discs (CDs and DVDs) have pits of varying depths within the groove pressed directly into the metallic layer of the media. The varying depths have different reflectivity values which translate to 0s and 1s. CD-R, DVD-R and their cousins use organic dyes rather than a hard metallic layer. The recording laser changes the phase of the dye where pressed discs would have pits. Different phases have different reflectivity values; see previous paragraph. The problem is that the dyes are organic, and they do decay. How quickly depends on how well the dye layer is sealed within polycarbonate. High quality media can last 10 years or more depending on storage conditions; cheap media can fail within 2 to 4 years. That's not to say that your problem is media failure. Try recording at a lower speed and see what happens. For the record, not all recordable optical media use organic dyes. Magneto-optical (MO) media use a combination of higher-powered write lasers, metallic recording layers and magnetic fluxes to align atoms within the recording layer. Different alignments have different reflectivity values; see previous. MO media is far more durable than organic dye media; it is also more expensive. --Rich P.
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