Pineapple Express: Someone Is Wrong on the Internet?


log in or register to remove this ad




How fast? I am learning this right now.
So there was a period between 2006 and 2008 where Warner Brothers had a manufacturing defect which sped up the process of DVD rot, and a lot of those are now unplayable. They did do a replacement program when that came out. That was an outlier - very rapid rot. Basically, depending on the material used for the construction of the disc, and how the sticker on the DVD interacts with the material sped up oxidation. But I really found out about this when my Dad, who has a big collection going back to the 90s, started finding various DVDs were stopping mid play or not playing at all. 30 years seems to be when cheaper DVDs can start to have problems, not counting a defective process speeding it up. Better quality ones are supposed to last up to 100 years.
 

So there was a period between 2006 and 2008 where Warner Brothers had a manufacturing defect which sped up the process of DVD rot, and a lot of those are now unplayable. They did do a replacement program when that came out. That was an outlier - very rapid rot. Basically, depending on the material used for the construction of the disc, and how the sticker on the DVD interacts with the material sped up oxidation. But I really found out about this when my Dad, who has a big collection going back to the 90s, started finding various DVDs were stopping mid play or not playing at all. 30 years seems to be when cheaper DVDs can start to have problems, not counting a defective process speeding it up. Better quality ones are supposed to last up to 100 years.
The 100 year ones are typically labeled as "archival quality."
 





Remove ads

Top