0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 17600 times.
I've had quite a few CDs that succumbed to aging. People seem to forget the signal area is on top of the CD, protected only by a thin layer of lacquer and an even thinner layer of ink.
Seems you live underwater. My city is humid all the autumn and winter and I never lost any cd to mould or cd rotten, since my first cd in 1985(J.J.Cale/Troubadour).CDs has 4 layers, but vinyl data area is protected by nothing.http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:CD_layers.svg&page=1
A nice extensive reseach, mispressed discs is common to all formats.As a laser reading made no noise itself, any noise came from the master, usually in analogue tape.
Sure, blame it on analog, LOL. The problem is the digital transfer. Analog master tapes don't have pops that nearly blow your speakers. If they have a defect it should have been dealt with in digital mastering. Some of the problem is newer multi-format players not being able to read the CD properly. The CD is a seriously flawed medium. The disc spins at 200 to 500rpm. That's an accident waiting to happen. Jitter bug anyone? The CD is going extinct anyway. Sales keep dropping and sales of records are increasing. That's because records and record players are fun. You can actually read the liner notes and have something tangible. The effort it takes to clean a record and set it up has a direct reward in natural, continuous sound, not a sliced and diced unreasonable imitation. Part of this hobby is pursuit. Newbies and old heads alike, enjoy the upgrade process, learning and having the satisfaction of listening to a magnificent machine, making natural sounding music and hearing it get better. If you think all records are hissy and full of clicks and pops and skips, you don't have a clue. Some people spend big bucks on record players because they get a direct return on their investment. Some people also feel that no digital media has the sound potential of analog, not at this point in time. If you disagree, fine, but I'll remind you that this is the vinyl circle. neo
The effort it takes to clean a record and set it up has a direct reward in natural, continuous sound, not a sliced and diced unreasonable imitation.
I've long wondered why some folks make such a big deal about digital sampling. Would it trouble you to learn that your perceptual sampling rate is even lower than redbook CD? Even worse, the various features (amplitude, pitch, etc) of sound are processed separately (works the same way for vision).IMO, it's not so much a matter of format as how well it's engineered. I have plenty of examples of both mediums which sound superb, as well as lots of crappy sounding examples of both.Personally, I prefer to play neither. I've never enjoyed listening to music quite as much as I do with my Bryston BDP-1. That, I imagine is the future (the near future, anyway) of music playback and I embrace it gleefully.
There are receptors in the human ear that correspond to 100KHz. Just because we don't consciously hear it, doesn't mean we don't perceive it.
So why do you guys always argue about this?