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July 20th, 2009

How safe are your CD-Rs?

Posted by Adrian Kingsley-Hughes @ 10:57 am

Categories: Thoughts

Tags: Disc, CD-R, Consumer Electronics, Personal Technology, Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Going back through his old CD-Rs and transferring the data to hard disk, Adrian Wong of TechARP experienced a failure rate of nearly 10% for discs recorded some 7 to 9 years ago and kept under ideal storage conditions (cool, dark and dry).

Of the corrupted CD-Rs, many of them only had a few files corrupted, but two of the CD-Rs were completely unreadable. Neither one of the two CD/DVD drives we used could even recognize the CD-Rs, much less read anything off them.

There doesn’t seem to be any particular pattern with the disc failures - either with age or with brand. The newest (2002) discs had the highest level of corruptions, followed by the oldest (2000). Of course, those two vintages had the fewest number of samples and the actual results may change radically with a larger sample size.

Even though branded CD-Rs from the likes of Kodak were expected to last longer, they appeared equally susceptible to failure as the cheap, no-brand CD-Rs.

I decided to check through my old CD-Rs. Oddly enough, after checking some 120 discs, I’ve yet to find a single corrupted disc. I’m not saying that I don’t have dead discs, but it would seem that my failure rate for a random selection is less than 10%.

The difference in experiences? No idea. I always buy good-quality discs and avoid no-name CD-Rs (and DVDs for that matter). I always verify the disc after burning too, which does usually catch a few duds before I put them back in the jewel case. Maybe that’s the critical factor.

Either way, I now rarely burn discs, CD-Rs or DVDs, having moved to flash drives.

If you do come across a dead disc then Elprime’s Media Recovery software might be the tool to save your data.

What’s your failure rate like?

Adrian Kingsley-HughesAdrian is a technology journalist and author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology. He also runs a popular blog called The PC Doctor. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations

Want to get in touch? Got a tip? Feel free to drop me a note! I ALWAYS respect anonymity. I'm also on Twitter (@the_pc_doc)

Right to Reply: Should any industry representatives wish to comment on any posts on Hardware 2.0, I will be happy to publish their reply verbatim on this blog.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 43 Talkback(s)
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?
1- What do trained archivists use for saving digital information? Can anyone point us to a a reputable resource or two on the topic with which they have personal experience? Please remember that som... (Read the rest)
Posted by: bwedeking@... Posted on: 08/19/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Perhaps  frgough | 07/20/09
The article claims ...  Adrian Kingsley-HughesZDNet Moderator | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  alokgovil | 07/20/09
It may have been the writer  itpro_z | 07/20/09
I agree ...  Adrian Kingsley-HughesZDNet Moderator | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  karnok.d@... | 07/20/09
Old news, use Taiyo Yuden  wgrimes | 07/20/09
I agree ...  Adrian Kingsley-HughesZDNet Moderator | 07/21/09
It's back to stone tablets then  Alan Smithie | 07/20/09
I would like to know how safe DVD -R's are  Lerianis10 | 07/20/09
Safe DVD-Rs  UNSRM | 07/20/09
more failures than commercial music/movies?  ridingthewind | 07/20/09
Pressed not Burned  sbalun | 07/20/09
Correct  wgrimes | 07/20/09
They burn the groves in with a heavy laser  NZJester | 07/22/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  Capt_Sparky | 07/20/09
almost all my CDs are unreadable  onepersonsopinion@... | 07/20/09
I Shred all my old ones.. most of the stuff gets transferred to dvd at..  Been_Done_Before | 07/20/09
CDR, DVDR and BDR  jorios_cr@... | 07/20/09
What is the life expectancy for flash memory?  Reality-based | 07/20/09
About 10 years ...  Adrian Kingsley-HughesZDNet Moderator | 07/21/09
Put those photos in print  Herrie | 07/22/09
In some cases less than a year  Tony R. | 08/10/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  elprime | 07/21/09
I can second ...  Adrian Kingsley-HughesZDNet Moderator | 07/21/09
No good guarantees  Boot_Agnostic | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  ps.techrep@... | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  varick | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  NCWeber | 07/21/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  deadguy69@... | 07/21/09
That is worse than 35mm film  Aboleyn | 07/21/09
why use plastic anymore?  badi335 | 07/21/09
Hard drives have limits too  Jonah49 | 07/22/09
Yeah, but how many laptops use eSATA?  UAC nanny screen | 07/22/09
200 reasons  Tony R. | 08/10/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  windozefreak | 07/21/09
Floppies are the answer.  nikacat | 07/21/09
Burning at slower speeds is best  NZJester | 07/22/09
Slow speed works best for quality.  Jonah49 | 07/22/09
Yep! would advise the same thing  thx-1138_@... | 07/22/09
Same Here  fo128 | 07/23/09
It was Kodak Gold CDs for longevity storage, now it seems to be TAYIO YUDEN  John238 | 08/18/09
RE: How safe are your CD-Rs?  bwedeking@... | 08/19/09

What do you think?

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