The mutual Christmas present that Mrs A and I gave each other is giving us nostalgic pleasure; but we have found some faulty discs. Some slip and click and one or two do not find tracks. I have of course tried them on more than one player. I wonder if anyone else has had the same problem, or do we have a dodgy batch?
Kings boxed set of Argo recordings
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Nevilevelis
Sounds like a dodgy batch. You should return them after contacting customer services. Annoying. I had a faulty CD from Hyperion and they were not helpful at all - wouldn't offer me a refund or replacement, but did offer me the opportunity to choose another title. Very odd.
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Nevilevelis
Originally posted by MickyD View PostI'm really amazed by that, Nevilevelis...in my experience, Hyperion have always been extremely helpful. They were also one of the few companies to honour replacing all 'bronzed' CDs, when that problem happened a few years ago.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThe mutual Christmas present that Mrs A and I gave each other is giving us nostalgic pleasure; but we have found some faulty discs. Some slip and click and one or two do not find tracks. I have of course tried them on more than one player. I wonder if anyone else has had the same problem, or do we have a dodgy batch?
Are you able to say which discs were faulty so I can check my copies?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostI know I am teaching Grandmother to suck eggs, but have you tried cleaning them?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThey are just in cardboard sleeves (no liners) so I wonder if that makes for poor surfaces?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Two ideas that might (or might not) help:
1) Try cleaning the CD player laser lens. There are inexpensive kits that do this automatically. (IMO It is unlikely that the CDs, being new, need to be cleaned - but who knows.)
2) It is very likely that the offending CDs will play fine in your computer CD/DVD drive as computer drives are build to a different specification. If that is the case - use your computer to copy the errant CDs to CD-R discs. (Not ideal, but this often works.)
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Re-reading ardy's comment that he has "of course tried them on more than one player", the problem does appear to lie in the discs rather than the player. If there is no obvious muck on the discs, it does seem as if he's been unfortunate with the box he's been sent - and intended as a joint present, too.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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