Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul
Yep, regardless of any cleaning products, recordable CDs degrade over time.
Depending on quality, their lifespan could be as short as 20 years. Commercial [eg Music] CDs [should] last a lot longer.
In short, No, a CD/DVD player simply shines a laser at the disk.
They wont be damaged any more than a torch would be if you shined it at one.
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Thank you for the replies and for informing us that residue does not damage the actual player.
I think what these questions come town to is how CDs and DVDs are protected from all types of products and whether that protective layer protects the contents from things like handwashing products.
---------- Post added at 14:35 ---------- Previous post was at 14:32 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by spiderplant
Just found this:
Code:
Optical disc formats Average longevity
CD-R (phthalocyanine dye, gold metal layer) >100 years
CD-R (phthalocyanine dye, silver alloy metal layer) 50 to 100 years
DVD-R (gold metal layer) 50 to 100 years
CD (read-only, such as an audio CD) 50 to 100 years
CD-RW (erasable CD) 20 to 50 years
BD-RE (erasable Blu-ray) 20 to 50 years
DVD+R (silver alloy metal layer) 20 to 50 years
CD-R (cyanine or azo dye, silver alloy metal layer) 20 to 50 years
DVD+RW (erasable DVD) 20 to 50 years
BD-R (non-dye, gold metal layer) 10 to 20 years
DVD-R (silver alloy metal layer) 10 to 20 years
DVD and BD (read-only, such as a DVD or Blu-ray movie) 10 to 20 years
BD-R (dye or non-dye, single layer or dual layer) 5 to 10 years
DVD-RW (erasable DVD) 5 to 10 years
DVD+R DL (dual layer) 5 to 10 years
That's a lot longer than your typical hard drive.
I bought my first CDs in 1986, and I haven't noticed any failing yet.
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Neither have I, and I bought my first CDs in the early 90s. Yes the odd track on the odd disc doesn't play properly but it's very rare and from memory it's generally the last disc on the CD which has become corrupted over time.