100 Blank Bulk CDR's = $12.50 at Best Buy, No Rebates!

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Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
12,839
2,625
136
I got TY Fujs 50 spindles last week at Best Buy for essentially the same price. The last time I used CMC discs for audio purposes I got a pretty high rate of defective burns (noise added to the recordings). Not trying to crap this thread, just pointing out this is only a fair price for a mediocre (in my opinion) media.
 

bman46

Senior member
Nov 17, 2003
682
0
0
Even with the cheapest discs ive ever bought ive never had any kind of problem burning cdrs
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,225
126
Originally posted by: bman46
Even with the cheapest discs ive ever bought ive never had any kind of problem burning cdrs

For audio, or data? Data CDs have an extra layer of error-correction, that can often work around sub-standard media quality. Audio is a different story. I would never use CMC discs for archiving audio, although they would be fine for giveaway copies of stuff to friends, I suppose.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,225
126
Originally posted by: nomadh
Just got 2 in san diego east county store. They had at least a few left last night.
Smart burn shows:
Drive Type = CD-RW
Disc Type = CDR
Material = Phthalocyanine
Lead In = 97:26:66
Lead Out = 79:59:73
Nominal Capacity = 702.83MB
Manufacturer Maybe = CMC Magnetics Corporation
SMART-BURN Speed Limit = 52X (Write)

I got in for a couple of spindles of these at a BB on the EC, and I got the same results. These are totally unbranded, untextured, CMC, "silver/silver" media. Good for labeling, or giving away, or throwing away, whatever. Wouldn't trust for archival, reflective layer will probably flake off in a year or two anyways.

Nice that they will actually burn at 52x though.

Anyone know anything about the free "Rhapsody" music service free one-month trial CD that was included? If anything else, that makes this a deal for 101 CDRs, since one is included in the signup case, according to the back of the box. Looks like you get up to 10 free burnable music downloads during your first trial month. Anyone know about the song selection? The service is offered by Real, and I am loath to allow any of their software near my computer.
 

utahraptor

Golden Member
Apr 26, 2004
1,078
282
136
My main use for these would be data. I need to back my TV show archives. Would these be reliable in the long run?
 

dr150

Diamond Member
Sep 18, 2003
6,570
24
81
Originally posted by: misterj
Originally posted by: dr150
Made in Taiwan? Fughetaboutit!

Only Fuji "Made In Japan" Tayo Yuden cd-rs my friend.

the silver ones in the blue wrapped cake-stack arent all tayo yudens are they? even if they say made in japan? i thought i saw someone say some might be different. i want to be sure the next time i get some. hm that reminds me, i dont think i got my rebate last time =/


From what I understand, TY = Made In Japan.
 

dr150

Diamond Member
Sep 18, 2003
6,570
24
81
Originally posted by: unclebud
naw, they aren't anymore (around here), just some of the 30 pks

fuji 30 pk


There's still 50 spindles of Fuji ("Made In Japan" Tayo Yudens). They're getting scarce though at Frys. They're being replaced with "Made In Taiwan" 50 spindles.

Best Buy, however, only had the "Made In Japan" ones.

You just have to have an eye for it and read the label before you buy to aoid the Taiwanese crap.

The only consistency I've found at all stores for "Made In Japan" are the Fuji 30 Spindles (Silver) and Fuji Colors (all spindle sizes).
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,225
126
Originally posted by: misterj
haha very tempting indeed. ive long since switched to only buying the best - tayo yuden (fujifilm). maybe ill pick up a spindle anyways in case i get tempted to fling frisbees at the property manager who keeps giving me tickets..

I really don't understand the TY "fanaticism". They are hardly the "best" CD-Rs, although, they are at least decent quality, for a reasonable price (when on sale or after rebates). However, they use cyanine dye, which is the worst in terms of longevity as compared to p-cyanine and metal azo. I still personally prefer, after extensive testing, Mitsubish Chemicals-made metal azo discs. I don't even know if they make them any more, but I've never had any compatibility problems with them, ever, in any playback device, nor quality issues with the discs, nor readability issues with them, several years later. I have had various issues with Fuji TY discs, including some recent batches of blanks that I purchased that had "splotchy" dye layers, and after burning, were unreadable in some of my devices, even though the burner could still read them fine.

My current choice, for lowest error rates, and best compatibility even with flaky devices, are Maxell-branded high-quality Ritek discs. They actually have lower error rates than T-Y, use p-cyanine dye for (theoretically) greater longevity, and have higher compatiblity among the devices that I've personally tested them on.

The days of the reign of T-Y discs are over, I'm afraid.

(I will say that any of the above three discs mentioned, is still a major step above any CMC-made disc. I've had K-Hypermedia discs, "fade away" about a year after burning them, and their oldest cyanine-based media was possibly the worst on the planet. Thankfully they don't even make cyanine-based media anymore. T-Y still does, probably because they invented that type of dye, and probably because it's cheap to make, as compared to the other dye types.)