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  2. Acetate disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetate_disc

    Acetates are usually made by dubbing from a master recording in another medium, such as magnetic tape.In the vinyl record manufacturing process, a lacquer master disc is cut and electroforming is used to make negative metal molds from it; certain molds are converted into stampers, can be used to press thousands of vinyl copies of the master.

  3. Compact disc manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_Disc_manufacturing

    A CD can be used to store audio, video, and data in various standardized formats defined in the Rainbow Books. CDs are usually manufactured in a class 100 (ISO 5) or better clean room, to avoid contamination which would result in data corruption. They can be manufactured to strict manufacturing tolerances for only a few US cents per disk.

  4. Compact disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_disc

    A CD is made from 1.2-millimetre (0.047 in) thick, polycarbonate plastic, and weighs 14–33 grams. [71] From the center outward, components are: the center spindle hole (15 mm), the first-transition area (clamping ring), the clamping area (stacking ring), the second-transition area (mirror band), the program (data) area, and the rim.

  5. Disc rot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_rot

    Disc rot is the tendency of CD, DVD, or other optical discs to become unreadable because of chemical deterioration. The causes include oxidation of the reflective layer, reactions with contaminants, ultra-violet light damage, and de-bonding of the adhesive used to adhere the layers of the disc together.

  6. CD player - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD_player

    The process of playing an audio CD, touted as a digital audio storage medium, starts with the plastic polycarbonate compact disc, a medium that contains the digitally encoded data. The disc is placed in a tray that either opens up (as with portable CD players) or slides out (the norm with in-home CD players, computer disc drives and game consoles).

  7. Aluminum disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminum_disc

    Bombs on London recorded on an aluminum disc by the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1940 on display at the CBC Museum. In the field of audio recording, an aluminum disc (aluminium in the UK and elsewhere) is a phonograph (gramophone in the UK) record made of bare aluminum, a medium introduced in the late 1920s for making one-off recordings.

  8. Compressed audio optical disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressed_audio_optical_disc

    A compressed audio optical disc, MP3 CD, or MP3 CD-ROM or MP3 DVD is an optical disc (usually a CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R or DVD-RW) that contains digital audio in the MP3 file format. Discs are written in the " Yellow Book " standard data format (used for CD-ROMs and DVD-ROMs ), as opposed to the Red Book standard audio format (used for CD-DA audio CDs).

  9. Optical disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_disc

    An optical disc is designed to support one of three recording types: read-only (such as CD and CD-ROM), recordable (write-once, like CD-R), or re-recordable (rewritable, like CD-RW). Write-once optical discs commonly have an organic dye (may also be a ( phthalocyanine ) azo dye , mainly used by Verbatim , or an oxonol dye, used by Fujifilm [ 4 ...