There's plenty of stories about DVD rot too, Phase! 
JB

JB
It shouldn’t. Once it’s in the player, nothing touches the surface but laser. Rot usually depends on the quality of the manufacture.
Actually on a pressed discs (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray) the information is stamped on the plastic; it’s just like a vinyl record. The aluminum is just there to be a mirror for the laser.There is one more thing that goes wrong with CDRs, DVDs, and Bluray discs: they have a chemical emulsion layer that will degrade over time no matter what you do. As the chemical bonds break down, the data layer fades. Exposure to heat or sunlight will speed up the process dramatically, but nothing will stop it altogether. They have a shelf life of some indeterminate length, and that's it.
Pressed CDs do not have this exact problem, because they encode their data as physical dents in the aluminum layer. A perfectly manufactured CD will last a long time and probably see you out.
Actually on a pressed discs (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray) the information is stamped on the plastic; it’s just like a vinyl record. The aluminum is just there to be a mirror for the laser.
As for the Recordable discs, 6 years is about the length of time that you can get on average for a disc. After that you are on borrowed time.
Pressed discs do not use chemicals, like CD-R’s. The interior is metal which suffers from oxidation.Okay, but even in a pressed DVD or Bluray, the chemistry will still break down over time and they become unreadable. We just have to hope it takes a long time.
This video has an example with Levar Burton that shows really bad Laserdisc rot.
I've noticed some discs feel rather warm when I stop playing and take them right out of the player. Maybe over time, this could cause the adhesive bonds to loosen?It shouldn’t. Once it’s in the player, nothing touches the surface but laser. Rot usually depends on the quality of the manufacture.
I actually have a CD Video disc (small regular CD size) of the Fat Boys/Beach Boys “Wipeout” hit from the 80’s still shrink wrapped that has the CD tracks and a PAL copy of the music video Of course, I’ve been thinking of getting a Laserdisc player but haven’t seen a multi-system one for NTSC regions. I know that in PAL territories there were PAL players that could play NTSC discs on PAL TV’s, but I haven’t seen or heard of a reverse one.Techmoan! I watch him periodically.
Actually on a pressed discs (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray) the information is stamped on the plastic; it’s just like a vinyl record. The aluminum is just there to be a mirror for the laser.
As for the Recordable discs, 6 years is about the length of time that you can get on average for a disc. After that you are on borrowed time.
With CD-R/W’s, DVD-R/W’s and BD-R/E each manufacturer has their own way of “testing” life expectancy. There is no universal test. So the 100+ year claims should be taken with “a grain of salt”.The aluminum can oxidize though, hence the Gold CDs, and DVDs.
There are some recordable disks that supposedly last 1000 years (M-Disk) they can only be written once though, with a special burner.
I've noticed some discs feel rather warm when I stop playing and take them right out of the player. Maybe over time, this could cause the adhesive bonds to loosen?
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