What's the best DVD-R brand?


Recommended Posts

if those dvd's are readable in full speed (which means less errors or retries that your dvd-rw player is making while reading those memorex dvd's) than it's allright.But if your drive is reading it slowly like 1mb/sec than it's not a good sign.

how can I test if they're readable at full speed? They play on my DVD players just fine. How do I test and see if it's reading it slowly?

I'll echo the same thing a few above have said. Taiyo Yuden are by far the best. Even their value line, which are considerably cheaper come out better then just about any other brand. I think someone else said it above, but the blanks made in Japan are just about always better than when they are made anywhere else.

Verbatim if you can afford it. Otherwise, any other DVD would be fine but you need to burn at low speed to minimize errors. They can advertise as 8x 16x or whatever but don't trust the advertising. Besides, cheap DVDs will stop working after a couple of years so check them regularly to make sure everything is ok.

I'll echo the same thing a few above have said. Taiyo Yuden are by far the best. Even their value line, which are considerably cheaper come out better then just about any other brand. I think someone else said it above, but the blanks made in Japan are just about always better than when they are made anywhere else.

right, I always try to have a spindle of Taiyo Yuden blanks to copy stuff that needs to be kept, but i'll buy any brand for stuff that i'm not going to need in a while...

:laugh: Fair enough, I guess it is clear-cut.

Verbatim is the brand to go for.

I have nothing against Memorex (I've used their DVD+RW and CD-RW media for the past year-plus); however, I'm not a fan of -R media (from anyone) given recent stability advances in terms of +RW media.

Also, while -R media used to have a large price advantage over +RW media, that is now only true for CD-sized media; the advantage for DVD-sized media has practically gone away, especially given the increased tolerances for rewrites. I don't even buy write-once media any more.

It depends on where the disc was manufactured... not the brand name. There are a number of low cost Verbatim DVD-r and DVD+R that are causing a lot of people grief... mostly in the Life Series. The last I checked it was made by CMC MAG-coded media and is pretty crappy (but I could be wrong).

Honestly, the state of DVD media is going downhill. It probably has to do with the razor thin margins they are making on the sale of discs... 100pak for less then $20 sometimes. Not much profit to be made here, and much easier to outsource to cheap manufacturing plants.

The only real archival DVDs are: JVC Taiyo Yuden and some Verbatim/other branded... those produced by Mitsubishi Chemicals, Mitsubishi-Kagaku Media, Verbatim. I would avoid TDK. It stopped producing quality media in 2006 and Sony left the market in 2010. You will find both still, but they are not the same, though you probably should be able to purchase quality Sony sources for a while.

Here is a guide:

http://www.digitalfaq.com/reviews/dvd-media.htm

  • Like 1

Taiyo Yuden is what I use. Just seem to have a higher success rate for a stack of 100. Also I like to get them because there is no branding on the discs. Overall they cost a little more, but I will happily pay it.

http://www.rima.com/CTGY/TAIYOYUDEN.html

Taiyo Yuden is what I use. Just seem to have a higher success rate for a stack of 100. Also I like to get them because there is no branding on the discs. Overall they cost a little more, but I will happily pay it.

http://www.rima.com/CTGY/TAIYOYUDEN.html

I don't use my burner a lot, but I have used this brand and they worked very well. As with most things, you get what you pay for.

I have learned to use RW DVDs.

You get a second chance to burn, if something goes wrong.

I have also learned to keep the burn speed low, say at 2X -- no matter what the advertised DVD label says, or the DVD drive claims.

And I give a plus 1 for Verbatim.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Payday TWO!! Is 13 years old man I feel old - I remember trying it out and if I did not know I would say 5-6 years ago or something
    • Payday 2 engine upgrade adds 64-bit and DX11 support, drastically shrinks install size by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Payday 2, the most popular entry in the heisting game franchise, is getting a surprising update after all these years. This is slated to be a complete engine upgrade that will enhance almost every aspect of the 13-year-old title, targeting performance, loading times, file size, rendering backend, and more. Developer Sidetrack Games is planning a beta to test out the new version ahead of the full public launch. The development team today revealed that the long-awaited upgrade to the 64-bit architecture is happening with this Diesel 3.0 engine update. By letting the game use more ram than 4GB, it is said to improve stability and compatibility on most hardware. It should also help modders in the long term with implementing larger changes too. "While many of the changes are made on the backend and not everything will be visible to you guys because it is a massive rewrite of the entire codebase, there will be a lot of things that you can look forward to," Sidetrack explained. Payday 2 will also hop over from DirectX 9 to 11. Instead of visual improvements, this is slated to reduce the amount of VRAM used by the title, letting more lower-end hardware access the title and run it better. Since these changes would require a complete redownload of the game anyway, Sidetrack says it has revamped "the game's packaging and bundling system." This should reduce the installation size from 86GB to 32GB. "So, now it's time to finally move the game to your SSDs," added the studio. The Payday 2 Diesel Engine 3.0 update is entering open beta on June 30 for Steam users. No console release plans were announced today. Sidetrack Games says it has been working on this complete rewrite of the codebase for the last nine months. While these changes should break most mods, the studio encouraged modders to use the beta period to repair their creations with support from the development team.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • First Post
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Kolakid60 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      440
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      157
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      71
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!