Disc rot on CDs. It's a really bad problem.

Discussion in 'Music: Albums, cassettes, new releases...' started by CuriousAboutCassettes2005, Jan 17, 2026.

  1. CuriousAboutCassettes2005

    CuriousAboutCassettes2005 Member

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    One of the CDs I got for my birthday is having playback issues with constant dropouts and I received it in brand new condition. Another CD I got for Christmas still works, but has visible signs of rot and it's a 2025 release. I guess it got instarot. The only CD I recently acquired that I can say without a doubt is rot free is a Thomas & Friends album called Thomas Songs And Roundhouse Rhythms. It's from 2001, and I purchased 2 new old stock copies with my own money. Both copies are rot free. From now on, I'm limiting the CDs I purchase for certain artists who supervise most of the CD making process. As well as this, I'm saving for a optical drive so I can make backups of my CDs because I'm sick of the lack of quality control on CDs.
     
  2. Black Fingers

    Black Fingers Active Member

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    Do the drop outs occur at any time at any place on the cd or mostly on the last track?
    I have some cd's that have bit rot but only self burned ones. At some point i owned a Philips cd burner which uses blank cd's for audio not data and these don't have rot on the last track only cd's burned on a computer.
    On original discs i have none that have rot and i own about a 1000 cd's.
    I have given this some thought and tried to find out what is causing the rot...it's UV light...plastic reacts with it so the laser can't read the bits correctly anymore.
    And if a cd is stored on a shelf in normal daylight for a certain time the light will leak through the top of the cd tray causing only a small spot to be affected.
    I found this out many many years ago and i keep my collection in a dark room with a minimum of UV light entering the room.
    When i was a kid in the 70's my dad taught me straight away to keep my cassette's always in a dark place, this also counts for cd's. :)
     
  3. Longman

    Longman Well-Known Member S2G Supporter

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    Can you tell if the discs which are "rotting" are pressed or burnt CD-Rs ? Burnt discs are more susceptible to problems like bronzing. I once left a DVD-R uncased near the TV and a year later it was unplayable and the half that was exposed to light was a different colour.

    Another factor is how tolerant your CD player is. Some erly ones wouldn't even play CD-Rs.Much as I like the Sony ZS-D55 in my Avatar I have three and CD playback is iffy on all of them. In contrast late model "Walkman" CD players, have always been reliable for me.
     
  4. CuriousAboutCassettes2005

    CuriousAboutCassettes2005 Member

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    Almost all of my CDs that are rotting are pre-recorded burned discs, but one of the CDs that is rotting is a pressed CD.
     
  5. Mister X

    Mister X Moderator Staff Member

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    I rip my CDs using my older desktop computer and you can get a USB drive for $21 on Amazon. I haven't done one in awhile but I use freeware like Foobar 2000 to do it.

    Not every CD player will play all CDs, sometimes it's the deck and if your using burned CDs they might not work on certain players. The last batch I bought on Amazon, Verbatim CD-Rs, have been great, I don't think I've had an issue with them.
     
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  6. simonali19

    simonali19 New Member

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    I have lots of CDs that have succumbed to rot, some going brown and some having a broken glass effect. All pre-recorded discs. One was an album that would have cost me a lot of money (well, about £60 anyway) to replace but, luckily, it was reissued a few years ago and that enabled me to replace it at a reasonable cost.
     
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  7. mr.Vox

    mr.Vox New Member

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    My first post here.
    So which brand of blank cd-r, dvd-r etc. seem to be reliable through out the years? I think that discs made by Tayo Yuden are the best.
     
  8. Black Fingers

    Black Fingers Active Member

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    So like i said in my earlier post, light fucks up your cd's...well the bromite that is in the plastic as a flame/fire retardent of the cd's is actually the real cause....

    That browing is the bromite, you could try to RetrObright your cd...

    Apparantly the plastic used in older cd's is of a much better quality then nowadays.
     
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  9. Longman

    Longman Well-Known Member S2G Supporter

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    I have only ever had one CD do the broken glass thing. That was one of the two discs in a shop bought Now 198X set. Annoying though because that double CD cost me around £20 (the price label was still on the case to remind me) and the deterioration happened while the CDs were carefully stored in their case.
     
  10. simonali19

    simonali19 New Member

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    I had one of those two part CD singles (The Orb, I think) and both discs did it!
     
  11. radiorich

    radiorich Active Member

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    Hello Guys,
    I guess I have been lucky and far as burned discs not playing in older machines I have Pioneers second CD player made and It plays my burned discs !
    Sincerely Richard
     
  12. scottsasonic

    scottsasonic Member

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    Yes this makes CD a fabulous sounding , ticking time-bomb. It's the fate of the product - no matter which way you slice it.
    You have to think about the different types of storage you have as well. get it on HDD if you can if you have stuff on Disc
    if it's of value.
    My 'cherished' Laserdiscs started getting rot in the 90s. CDs I start to see problems in the early 2000s and now the
    manufacturing specs are obviously shite - so this is going to be an ultra disposable product. I also wonder about what they
    dump on these modern CD's .. probably an altered MP3 file like many 'promo dj' cd's already are.
    I constantly work on archiving my CD collection which is mostly private pressed stuff, CD-r albums
    because it's gonna happen and some artists only released on CD during a 25 year period.

    I see all those hype videos on youtube about CDs . They are delusional if they think this can be a lasting format.
    Turns out 8-track tapes last longer.
     
  13. scottsasonic

    scottsasonic Member

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    I love when I get a CD from someone online who said it was Mint and there are micro-specs out of the top layer that chip the paint and the layers
    to make dropouts in the CD that you can never fix. This happens often.
     
  14. RTM

    RTM Member

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    It exists. But I own lirterally thousands of them and have had exactly ONE go bad. It was on a Brass Quintet recording on some (not Telarc) surprisingly audiophile oriented label that I no longer recall. I do think it's rare, but I buy VERY few new issue (2020's) era CDs. For me, their pressing quality is the very least of their issues, lol.
     

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