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See “The Speed of Sound: How Safe is High-Speed CD-Audio Recording?

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See “The Speed of Sound: How Safe is High-Speed CD-Audio Recording?

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http://www.emedialive.com/EM2000/starrett5.html, for a very thorough analysis of audio disc quality at several different speeds. With some recorders and some media, it’s actually better to write faster — but in none of the tests performed did the error rate get anywhere near danger levels, regardless of speed. See the graphs in the article “Glenn Meadows’ CDR Tests” at http://www.digido.com/ for an examination of BLER (BLock Error Rate) with different recorders, different media, and different recording speeds. A few of the graphs show the same recorder and same media at different speeds, and in some cases the BLER increased at higher speeds, while in others it decreased. There is some cause to believe that recording at higher speeds can result in increasing “jitter”. This doesn’t cause any difference in BLER or in the extracted audio, but is audible during playback. See section (2-41). See http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/History/…r/stcroix.html for commentary about “write strategy” sele

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http://www.emedialive.com/EM2000/starrett5.html, for a very thorough analysis of audio disc quality at several different speeds. With some recorders and some media, it’s actually better to write faster — but in none of the tests performed did the error rate get anywhere near danger levels, regardless of speed. See the graphs at http://www.digido.com/meadows.html for an examination of BLER (BLock Error Rate) with different recorders, different media, and different recording speeds. A few of the graphs show the same recorder and same media at different speeds, and in some cases the BLER increased at higher speeds, while in others it decreased. See http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/History/Commentary/Parker/stcroix.html for commentary about “write strategy” selection and different media types.

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http://www.emedialive.com/EM2000/starrett5.html (web archive: http://web.archive.org/web/20040224114428/http://www.emediapro.com/EM2000/starrett5.html), for a very thorough analysis of audio disc quality at several different speeds. With some recorders and some media, it’s actually better to write faster — but in none of the tests performed did the error rate get anywhere near danger levels, regardless of speed. See the graphs in the article “Glenn Meadows’ CDR Tests” at http://www.digido.com/ for an examination of BLER (BLock Error Rate) with different recorders, different media, and different recording speeds. A few of the graphs show the same recorder and same media at different speeds, and in some cases the BLER increased at higher speeds, while in others it decreased. There is some cause to believe that recording at higher speeds can result in increasing “jitter”. This doesn’t cause any difference in BLER or in the extracted audio, but is audible during playback. See section (2-4

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http://www.emedialive.com/EM2000/starrett5.html, for a very thorough analysis of audio disc quality at several different speeds. With some recorders and some media, it’s actually better to write faster — but in none of the tests performed did the error rate get anywhere near danger levels, regardless of speed. See the graphs at http://www.digido.com/meadows.html for an examination of BLER (BLock Error Rate) with different recorders, different media, and different recording speeds. A few of the graphs show the same recorder and same media at different speeds, and in some cases the BLER increased at higher speeds, while in others it decreased. There is some cause to believe that recording at higher speeds can result in increasing “jitter”. This doesn’t cause any difference in BLER or in the extracted audio, but is audible during playback. See section (2-41). See http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/History/Commentary/Parker/stcroix.html for commentary about “write strategy” selection and differe

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