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#1
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Someone asked me where to find the acceptable number or rate of the
various types of errors for a CD. What publication might that be in, if those who know admit that there can be errors on a CD? g Good guesses are acceptable. Keep wild guesses to yourself, please. I thought of the Red Book too, but I've never seen one so I don't know what's in it. |
#2
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In article . com,
"Mike Rivers" wrote: Someone asked me where to find the acceptable number or rate of the various types of errors for a CD. What publication might that be in, if those who know admit that there can be errors on a CD? g Good guesses are acceptable. Keep wild guesses to yourself, please. I thought of the Red Book too, but I've never seen one so I don't know what's in it. so long as the errors are C1 only, there is no real problem and there can be hundreds or even thousands but obviously a low number is preferred. most plants establish their own limits of acceptance or rejection and if the C1 count is high for them, they will clone the disk or transfer to a ddp. a single C2 is unacceptable for replication, imo, and for all the plants i deal with. C3 is immediate death. a clover analyzer or plextools will reveal many things you wouldn't suspect. -- Digital Services Recording Studios http://www.digisrvs.com |
#3
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![]() Mike Rivers wrote: Someone asked me where to find the acceptable number or rate of the various types of errors for a CD. What publication might that be in, if those who know admit that there can be errors on a CD? g Good guesses are acceptable. Keep wild guesses to yourself, please. I thought of the Red Book too, but I've never seen one so I don't know what's in it. check he http://www.cloversystems.com/QA-101.htm bobs Bob Smith BS Studios we organize chaos http://www.bsstudios.com |
#5
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Mike Rivers wrote:
Someone asked me where to find the acceptable number or rate of the various types of errors for a CD. What publication might that be in, if those who know admit that there can be errors on a CD? g Ask the pressing plant. Everybody has their own personal idea about what is acceptable. Some plants just say if there are no E32s that it's okay. Some have very tight standards. Good guesses are acceptable. Keep wild guesses to yourself, please. I thought of the Red Book too, but I've never seen one so I don't know what's in it. I don't _think_ it lists acceptable error rates, but I will check it and see when I am back in my office. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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Thanks for the inputs. I was asking based on a telephone message I got
and I'm not sure what the real question is. I'll try to ask a better question when I hook with the caller and find out what he really wants to know. I suspect that he's talking about a pressed CD rather than a master submitted for replication since he knows plenty of mastering people who have to deal with the input part of the process daily. Thanks for the Clover link, Bob. I was trying to think of that company name and that would have been my first place to go. |
#7
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On 18 Oct 2005 18:26:54 -0700, Mike Rivers wrote:
Someone asked me where to find the acceptable number or rate of the various types of errors for a CD. What publication might that be in, if those who know admit that there can be errors on a CD? g Good guesses are acceptable. Keep wild guesses to yourself, please. I thought of the Red Book too, but I've never seen one so I don't know what's in it. The redbook specification is a maximum rate of 220 errors per second averaged over something like 10 seconds. These must all be correctable errors so E32's (or CU's) mean instant rejection. Most mastering engineers have much more rigorous standards. I wouldn't send out a master burned on a Taiyo Yuden disc if it averaged more than one C1 error per second or had a peak rate of more than 30 because I know that these figures are higher than I would normally see on that type of disc. If you want to take a look at some typical figures obtained using Plextools then take a look at some of the previous postings to Glenn Meadows' Mastering Webboard. One of the members has done some fairly extensive tests fairly recently. Cheers James. |