I don't know if this has been discussed before; I heard about it on Radio 3 but it's only recently affected me.
'The perfect sound, for ever' they told us forty years ago when the first CDs came out at £13.99. Hmm, well, I played one a few months ago which had aways played perfectly but suddenly the signal jumped backwards and forwards and faltered. Yesterday it was another, both incidentally Wyastone CDs of old Lyrita recordings. Cleaning has no effect, nor does trying it on another player.
The radio programme I heard referred to a 'golden' or mottled colouration on the disc itself. Its odd ot think of a digital product 'ageing' almost like an organic substance, but this seems to be what's happened. Luckily I still have my old Lyrita LPs.
Has anyone else noticed this? .
'The perfect sound, for ever' they told us forty years ago when the first CDs came out at £13.99. Hmm, well, I played one a few months ago which had aways played perfectly but suddenly the signal jumped backwards and forwards and faltered. Yesterday it was another, both incidentally Wyastone CDs of old Lyrita recordings. Cleaning has no effect, nor does trying it on another player.
The radio programme I heard referred to a 'golden' or mottled colouration on the disc itself. Its odd ot think of a digital product 'ageing' almost like an organic substance, but this seems to be what's happened. Luckily I still have my old Lyrita LPs.
Has anyone else noticed this? .
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