I used to find VHS tapes to have differing quality! Some looked perfect, crystal clear for the era but others were a little fuzzy or you'd get problems with the tracking! With DVD we get a perfect picture (or as perfect as the material on it can be)
JB
I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it!
I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it!
I can't say that I've ever encountered it on DVDs, but "laser rot" was caused by a less-than-perfect seal between the plastic platters of a laserdisc. Air would get in and begin to "rot" the ultra-thin layer of metal, turning it black. Given enough time, the metal would "burn away" and leave clear plastic. Even with laserdiscs, I saw that only a handful of times.
Mass-manufactured "home video" DVDs failed on me back in the early days—and always from one publisher. The discs looked perfectly fine—no scuffs or laser rot. That was another factor pushing me to "rip" the program to a hard-drive. Handbrake is free, multi-platform and very easy to use.
I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it! Do you know anything about it at all,Albertese?
JB
I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it! Do you know anything about it at all,Albertese?
JB
I assume you're talking about delamination, in which case the chances of this happening are FAR smaller than the chances of a VHS degrading
Apparently it's two separate things:I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it!
I assume you're talking about delamination, in which case the chances of this happening are FAR smaller than the chances of a VHS degrading
Apparently it's two separate things:I have heard of a thing called DVD rot though and that a lot of older discs are prone to it!
I assume you're talking about delamination, in which case the chances of this happening are FAR smaller than the chances of a VHS degrading
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/01/31/1043804519345.html
Unofficial estimates put the number of affected discs at between one and 10 per cent.
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