Burning Questions When Good Discs
Go Bad
Ever wonder what makes a disc
bad? Here's why they vary in quality, and why you should worry about the discs
you've entrusted with your data.
Burning CDs and DVDs is the easy
part.
Knowing your data will be there
when you go back to it days, months, or even years later--well, that's a bit
harder. Not all discs are created equal, as Fred Byers, information technology
specialist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, can attest.
Byers is part of a team heading
up an independent study of DVD media quality. Based on the first wave of
testing results, the situation is murky at best.
"We've found the quality
varies, depending upon the type of dye used to make the write-once discs and
[on the] the manufacturer," reports Byers. Even discs from the same
manufacturer, with the same brand, can test differently, Byers adds. "But
there was more of a significant difference when you compared discs between
manufacturers," he explains.
DVD Media Quality: The First
Tests
In the first phase of testing,
completed late last year, NIST focused on the most popular media: write-once,
single-layer DVD-R and +R discs. Rewritable discs will be tested in the second
phase, slated to start this fall. An interesting footnote to the study's
methodology: NIST uses media purchased off store shelves and via Web sites; and
while researchers are tracking the media by brand, they are not tracking the
specific factory source of the media tested. For example, a given
manufacturer's discs could originate from different production lines, which
could account for a variation in disc quality by the same manufacturer.
Hearing that there's a difference
between the generic, unbranded 100-spindle value-pack of media purchased online
and the branded offerings you might find on a Best Buy store shelf is not
surprising. After all, as David Bunzel, president of the Optical Storage Technology
Association, points out: "With a generic product, there's no consumer
recourse. It's buyer beware."
If a disc isn't properly
manufactured, the consequences can be dire. At best, the disc will fail
immediately during the burn process; this is a best-case scenario because then
you know from the start that the disc is faulty. At worst, you may get an
abundance of errors during the burn process. These errors won't interrupt the
burning process, and since write-once and rewritable DVD media have built-in
error correction to compensate for scratches and other abnormalities on the
disc (as do their CD cousins), any errors will be virtually invisible to you.
You'll only know they're there if you use a disc diagnostics program, such as
those offered by Ahead Software or Plextor. Nor will these errors affect the
playback of the disc--initially.
Down the road, however, such
invisible-to-the-eye errors can reduce the effectiveness of a DVD's built-in
error correction so that if some other issue develops on your disc, such as a
scratch, you could end up with an unreadable disc when you go back to it months
or years later.
But what would cause such a wide
disparity in media quality between branded discs from the same vendor?
"We don't know why it's
different--it could be a different dye, it could be a different manufacturing
process," notes Byers. "Manufacturers are constantly trying to
improve their dye formulas--in theory improving the disc."
Nonetheless, at the same time,
competitive forces are driving manufacturers to find ways to economize on
production costs. And cost-cutting measures can result in discs that don't
perform as well as those generated during an earlier production run, either in
terms of failing outright or not burning at the maximum possible speed on a
given DVD drive. "It varies over time, as the output changes," Byers
says.
Brand Disparity
As for the disparity between
brands that NIST found, the distinguishing factors come down to quality control
and the dyes used in disc production. Declining to name names, Byers points out
that "some manufacturers make their own discs, and some purchase them from
someplace else--which opens you to variations in the manufacturing plant, or
changes in the source [of that media]."
Vendors like Maxell and Verbatim
manufacture discs on their own production lines, as do Asian manufacturers CMC
Magnetics, RiData, Taiyo Yuden, and others; other name brands contract with a
third-party manufacturer to produce discs to their own specs; and still others
just buy third-party-produced media wholesale, without imposing their own set
of quality controls on the media production.
The intricacies of disc
production and quality control aren't the only variables that seem to affect
media. More surprising is the number of discs that seem to have a propensity
for specific hardware.
"One thing we've found in
compatibility testing [of DVD-R and +R media] is that it's a relationship
between a specific brand of media and the manufacturer of the hardware,"
observes Byers. "There was no one drive that played every single type of
compatible media, and there was no one media brand that played perfectly in
every drive."
And, he adds, sounding as
frustrated as any consumer might, "You can't say there's a clear,
delineated set of reasons as to why."
A Grading System?
One of the most common questions
I hear is, "What's a good brand of media to buy?" DVD and CD media
are so commonplace nowadays that it's easy to forget the complexities that go
into producing them. And if anything in that production process is off, it
could, in time, affect the integrity of the data you've burned to a disc.
"It's very tough to answer
that kind of question, because there are so many variables," says Byers.
"You don't get 100 percent yield when you manufacture these discs. We can
talk about the materials that produce a good disc, but it also has to do with
the manufacturing process. So, just to say the materials to look for doesn't
necessarily relate to it being a better disc." The same is true vice
versa.
So how can you know that the
media you're using will last you for the duration, so those archived photos
will still be there when you go back to a disc 20 years from now--or more?
For the moment, you can't. All
DVD and CD vendors make vague claims about disc life expectancy being somewhere
between 60 and 100 years--when the discs are treated with care and stored
properly.
But NIST's Byers is seeking to
change that. At an OSTA meeting in San Francisco this week, Byers is proposing
an industry-wide grading system to indicate disc quality.
Byers is motivated by the desire
to see a uniform mechanism in place to guide institutions and individuals
who'll be storing data, music, videos, and images for long periods of time.
"They need to be confident in their purchasing, so they can plan for their
strategies in storing their information," Byers says. "Long-term
storage has different meanings: For some, 30 years might be enough. For others,
50 or 75 years might be archive, or long-term, quality."
Longevity
Under Byers's proposal, a series
of tests would be developed to determine whether a DVD would last for a given
number of years. "If you were to purchase a disc in a store with a grade
that indicates it has passed a test to last X number of years, it removes a lot
of uncertainty for the consumer, and it can save some expense in premature
migration [to a new storage technology], or loss of data because they waited
too long [and the disc was no longer playable]," he says.
Although some archivists--both
individual and professional--are concerned about whether today's digital
storage mediums will be readable 50 or 100 years from now, Byers believes the bigger
concern for users will be when to migrate their data to the next technology,
"before the existing technology is obsolete."
The Disc Rot Myth
Media obsolescence isn't the only
thing people fear after committing a personal library's worth of data to CDs
and DVDs. But some worries--namely, fear of disc rot--are not fully warranted.
Like a bad seed, the myth of disc
rot self-perpetuates, cropping up every now and again as a sudden and mortal
threat to your copious collection of prerecorded and self-created discs.
The myth was once rooted in fact.
It is true that back in the 1980s, with the first generation of prerecorded
audio CDs, the edges of the discs were not always sealed properly, which
allowed moisture to get into the disc. Replicated, prerecorded discs use aluminum
for the reflective layer; when moisture came into contact with the aluminum on
prerecorded discs, explains Byers, it in turn oxidized, causing the aluminum to
become dull. "That's where the term 'rot' started," he says.
But that problem was quickly
identified and overcome. "The manufacturers learned what was going on, so
now the edges of discs are sealed with a lacquer," according to Byers.
Though the problem is typically associated with CDs, Byers notes that the
potential for interaction with oxygen is the same with both CD-ROMs and
DVD-ROMs.
The so-called rot issue does not
apply to recordable discs. For one thing, recordable optical media do not use
aluminum; instead, they use silver, and very rarely gold, or a silver-gold
alloy, for the reflective layer. "If the silver comes into contact with
sulfates [i.e., pollution, or high humidity], it could affect the silver, but
the likelihood of that is less than the likelihood of moisture coming into
contact with the aluminum on prerecorded discs," says Byers.
Enduring Myth
The term rot has persisted,
however inaccurately, as a means of identifying a plethora of problems with
optical discs. "If you get a faulty disc and see a problem that you can
visually see, you call it rot, but it could be the way the disc was
manufactured," says Byers. "Or if it was subjected to extreme
moisture and that moisture came into contact with the aluminum, it could be
that the reflectivity has changed. It's not really rot, it's oxidation of
aluminum. It should be a rare event on a disc, unless it's defective."
Beyond the realm of defective
discs, improper handling can cause otherwise good discs to go bad. Since
there's little protection between the label side of a CD and the data layer
itself, "scratches on the label side can scratch the metal, and that will
ruin the data," says Byers. It's not an issue for DVDs, though, since the
dye layer is sandwiched between two plastic layers.
Byers observed a similar problem
occurring with press-on labels: "For long-term storage, we recommend not
using press-on labels on CDs; when these start to dry up, they can peel the
metal right up, damaging data."
Melissa J. Perenson, PC World Tuesday,
June 15, 2004