FINDING THE BEST CD-Rs
By Mike Johnston
The Sunday Morning Photographer a weekly photo.net column:
May 9th , 2004
Good morning! I'm pleased to announce that "THE SUNDAY MORNING
PHOTOGRAPHER" is now being translated into German, for the convenience of readers in
Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, and for German-speakers elsewhere. The site is http://fotohall.de. The link is just below the copyright
notice. My thanks to translator Robert Ottohall.
Also, the column two weeks ago reached a new record readership at the
Polish-language site fotopolis.pl, where 4,852 people read the most recent column. That's
up from an average of 2,500 just last fall. My compliments to translator Lukasz
Kacperczyk, and my thanks to all the photographers who read fotopolis.
What's the most Archival CD-R Blank Media for Storing Image Files?
I recently wrote an article for Black & White Photography magazine about
the best CD-R blank media for photographers. The article was based entirely on research
and collating anecdotal reports, not on original experimentation or testing.
In the article I included a number of general recommendations as to how to evaluate
available options, what to buy, and where to find it.
Most important, though, is that it really does matter. There have been numerous reports
in the news media recently about CD media not being as archival as we once imagined. It's
like anything else: some of the cheapest options are really bad, and you have to choose
wisely if you want to find something that's reliably good.
There's not really one "best" type of disc. There are several good ones. The
problem is, how do you know what you're buying? Most CD-R blanks that are available in
most stores are only marked with the brand name (which is irrelevant
I'll get to that in a minute) and the country of origin (this can be marginally helpful,
as most "Made in Japan" discs are Taiyo Yuden, a dependably good factory. But
it's not much to go on).
The CD-R blanks I ended up recommending most highly in the article are MAM-A Gold
Archival manufactured in Colorado Springs, Colorado. These are the same blanks that were
formerly developed and manufactured by MITSUI. In June, 2003, Mitsui Tokyo divested
majority share of its media business to Computer Support Italcard s.r.l. (CSI) of Italy,
which now runs the plant in Colorado (now known as MAM-A, which originally stood for
"Mitsui Advanced Media America," http://www.mam-a.com,) and in Alsace, France
(MAM-E, formerly "Mitsui Advanced Media Europe," http://www.mam-e.com).
Technically speaking, "Mitsui" disks are no longer available, but MAM-A discs
are the same product made in the same factory.
Gold Archival are simply the highest-spec batches of Gold, which. This is the best
product in a range that is specifically designed and manufactured for archival storage
purposes.
MAM-A Gold Archival discs may not be the absolute best for you or for your burner; and
they may not have the 300-year archival life span that is claimed for them. The advantage
of buying this brand is that it's positively identifiable, and you can depend on what
you're getting.
Americans can buy directly at this link:
http://store.mam-a-store.com/standard---archive-gold.html
Buying in the Dark
The market for CD-R blank media is price-driven and seriously cutthroat, with
incomplete and insufficient information available to consumers. This makes it difficult
for manufacturers of quality products to remain profitable and for the market (i.e.,
consumers) to make intelligent choices: CD-R blanks are usually either generic, or of
generic manufacture sold under known brandnames. The brand label means nothing. According
to CDFreaks, you need to know the factory where the disc was made to know anything about
it, and the only way you can find that out is with the ATIP code, which you need a special
application to read. Another problem (with CD-R at least) is that there's no way to tell
the difference between cyanine-based discs and metalized-cyanine-based discs, which is
unfortunate because the former aren't very permanent and the latter are much more so.
Taiyo-Yuden discs are metalized cyanine, but again, you can't identify those at the store.
This brings to mind a theoretical economic problem if
the "free market" is supposed to work when consumers choose what they want, then
what does it mean when consumers are ignorant and marketers aren't informing them? They
then have no basis by which to choose. When anybody walks into an Office Depot, the
choices they have are a) brand name, which is irrelevant, and b) price. So of course the
market will be driven to the cheapest possible alternative, which everyone will say is
inevitable. "The market has spoken."
But I think that if all discs were marked in the store on an A to F scale for
permanence, the market might speak differently.
If we want to continue to have high-quality archival CD-R media available to us, I
think it's a good idea for us to spread the word amongst ourselves and patronize the
companies that are making the products we want and need for picture storage. HELP SPREAD
THE WORD! Copy this link and e-mail it to your digital photographer friends.
I have no affiliation whatsoever with any company.
Mike
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