What is the expected lifetime of a laser in a DVD Recorder? I would assume that recorders that burn directly to disc, would have a shorter lifetime. Because if you are recording a 2hr show, the laser stays on for 2hr at 1X DVD speed. But with a HD unit, you record to the HD, and then just burn the data to a DVD. The laser stays on to burn the disc, which is a very short time because of the faster burn speed. 8x-16x.
Any thoughts?
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In theory I agree but it probably depends on the manufacturing quality and just plain dumb luck with the equipment.
I've had a Sanyo DVD 500 recorder with an NEC 1100 drive in the recorder for 16 months and have burned 600 DVD's in real time and it runs flawlessly.
I bought a Sony DRU-530a DVD recorder for a computer about the same time and it craped out 4 months ago. Probably burned 60 DVD's on it. It won't play or record CD's either. -
It depends on a lot of factors. I've never been able to accurately gauge the hours use of a laser, but it should be somewhere in the thousands. Cheaper players use cheaper parts, and that number can be in the 100s. Cheap players tend to pop out in 18-24 months, while better equipment can run about 5 orso years with no problems.
Eventually, lasers die. And discs will outlast players for this very reason.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
[ lordsmurf ]
I agree in basic but I've seen some expensive equipment [Sony] crap out and a Cyberhome is still going. Manytimes a cheaper unit
[usually less than half the cost] will peform very well and it's lifetime is usually the length of time that a totaly new unit or system comes out
I understand that the media for the the double layer disks require greater output from the laser
That a +RW disk has a different recording media than the dye used in +R disks and that media requires less power from the laser. but I don't know for sure -
Pretty much all dyes and phase change materials require more than a pressed disc. AZO dyes tend to require less than some of the crappier ORGANIC or P-CYANINE dyes used by RITEK or PRINCO and the likes.
Dual layers require more, especially on recordable DL's.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by unclebud
Fortunately at the price of DVD Burners (roughly the cost of 100 single layer discs) failure shouldn't be to much of a concern.
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