Labelling DVD's
I've read in Videomaker magazine that it's NOT a good idea to use adhesive labels on DVDs. So what are my other options? What are you using, and how well is it going?
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I will be firing up my option tonight. I have an Epson 960 printer that includes a CD/DVD tray for printing onto a printable surface. I think some of our sponsors sell the R300, which I think also prints to DVD. Epson also sells refurbs on their own site. Since I use Maxell media, it took a little search to find it. Tape and Media has it and 50 is about $75 incl shipping. If you are using an Apple, Apple media is considered top-tier too.
Here is a Tom's hardware article that discusses it (comparing the Epson 900 to 960) http://www6.tomshardware.com/howto/20040127/index.html |
1) just write with a pen on the surface
2) get printable DVD-R's with a printer that supports it 3) there is some new technology coming where you can burn an image onto the surface 4) you can buy DVD-R's that have your custom image pressed in it like professional DVD's 5) you can get your DVD's pressed professionally |
I'm sorry that I can't find the hard data I thought I'd saved, but there is an inexpensive (<$100 US) dedicated printer that will print limited text and images (logo for example) on disk. Colour is determined by the ink ribbon (yes, ribbon) you purchase, and to print below the hole you have to pass it through a second time, but it's an improvement over a grease pen.
David Hurdon |
David, could it have been the Casio CW-50 CD Title Printer? Under $100.
http://www.casio.com/index.cfm?fusea...roduct=CW%2D50 |
Thank you, George, that's the one I was thinking of.
David Hurdon |
Don't forget the epson r200 ($99) and r300 ($170) - they print on inket printable cd's and dvd's also.
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We have an Epson R300 at work and it seems to work pretty well. I haven't really put it through the paces though. With something like that, you also get a decent printer for other work too. It also includes built in card reader for various types of cards.
One issue with it is that you can only print one DVD at a time. |
Does anyone know WHY labels (which are advertised as DVD labels) cause the DVDs oftentimes not to work?
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The reason I've seen most often expressed, Peter, is that DVDs spin much faster than CDs so that any unevenly distributed weight can interfere with their spinning true - even seen claims that heavy and unbalanced ink coverage can be a problem.
The other is heat build-up under the label and I think that's what I've seen, with picture break up starting about 40 minutes in and eventually making the disk unplayable. David Hurdon |
I have also heard that, due to the faster spinning rate, labels applied even slightly off center will give enough wobble to make the disk's playback erratic. Given that DVD-Rs are not 100% compatible with all DVD players to start with, I would not do anything that stands a chance to reduce the compatiblity. I have researched several duplicating services, and most of the reputable ones offer ink-jet or offset press printing of the disk surface as an option. One that I contacted offered "very thin photographic film" as a label -- not sure about how that differs from normal labels.
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Lighter, I suppsoe.
I guess the spinning off balance makes sense. Still, fast CD roms spin as fast as slow DVDs, but I've had DVDs totally ruined from labels, even in slow players, but labels on CDs have never caused a problem. Even heavily off balance. Wierd stuff. I hope next gen DVDs don't have this problem. |
"but labels on CDs have never caused a problem. Even heavily off balance."
Try them in your car CD player, and see if they don't fail. In my experience car CD players often have good skip protection (necessitating faster spinning) but lousy rotational unbalance damping. Rotational unbalance is proportional to the square of the rotational speed! "I hope next gen DVDs don't have this problem." It's entirely possible they will make it worse. New specs will call for more exacting rotational balance standards (as has been the trend since the CD's conception), and drive makers could be tempted to design their drives with these tighter tolerances in mind--that is to say, they may not bother to incorporate better damping given that lower unbalances for manufactured discs will be enforced. The result? An even slighter eccentric label placement will give a larger rotational unbalance at the higher rotational speeds (16X, 32X, ...) of the nextgen readers. |
So it will get to the point when we can't even use a magic marker on the disk for fear that the ink will throw it off? :)
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