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-   -   CD-R dye contrast ratio matters? (https://www.digitalfaq.com/forum/media/14102-cd-dye-contrast.html)

diuco17 02-11-2024 11:27 AM

CD-R dye contrast ratio matters?
 
Hello. So I've burned some CD-R media, but the car cd player is having a hard time with them, while others are read flawlessly. I mean, it reads and detects the disc, but the music is constantly interrupted. This leads me to think it is a matter of the data dye used, since being a recordable disc and not a stamped one means the grooves the laser has to follow when reading/recording are big for that to be a problem, specially since it is a 700MB disc. Also reflectivity is not a concern because the disc uses silver dye.
Therefore I would like to ask, which dye (pthalo, cyanine or azo) offers the highest contrast ratio and is more clearly readable for older players?

lordsmurf 02-11-2024 04:05 PM

This isn't what you're thinking. It's not at all about visuals, or contrast, or whatever. Not about grooves either.

Discs must have a prescribed reflectivity. This is achieve by the foil layer, in conjunction with the dyes. That's why, for example, azoic (metallic) dyes are best.

The laser pickup must also be strong enough to recieve the reflected data. Lasers weaken with age, and often fail within 10 years. That's why "100 year discs" are just stupid, considering that "100 year players" do not (and are unlikely to be produced at that far-away date).

There is no "silver dye". All CD-R dyes are shades of green or blue, even if pale. What you visually see is immaterial anyway. You're eyes do not see in the wavelengths used by the CD-R format or the laser.

Overall,
- pthalo is crap, always has been. Cheap Mitsui/MAM-A (rebadged by Kodak, few others)
- nobody uses cyanine anymore, not in decades. Taiyo Yuden was the last cyanine user, deep color dyes, but I'm not sure what they're doing these days; TY is owned by CMC now
- azo is Mitsubishi/Verbatim, now owned by CMC, licensed out to several defunct manufacturers in 00s/10s

All CD-R are now
- cheap (or "expensive" yet actually cheap) pthalocyanine
- quality azo

All CD-R look the same now, very pale green (phtalo), or very pale blue (azo). To the untrained eye, all look silver now.

Essentially, buy Verbatim discs, nothing else.


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