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In 2018, I overburn-tested a cheap no-name-brand CD-RW.

Overburning means attempting to burn beyond the disc's apparent maximum capacity at the risk of overshooting the actual limit.

When playing back that audio CD-RW using a very old CD player, towards the outermost edge, the disc rotation which is very slow starts speeding up more and more until it spins faster than at the beginning of the disc.
The audio fades into noise and then the CD player fails finding the track.

I am not sure whether this is the case with all CD-RW's or other disc types such as CD-R's.

Side note: Some older optical drives might have problems burning unknown brands of optical discs such as burning a CD-RW with the wrong laser strength making it appear blank.

In 2018, I overburn-tested a cheap no-name-brand CD-RW. Overburning means attempting to burn beyond the disc's apparent maximum capacity at the risk of overshooting the actual limit. When playing back that audio CD-RW using a very old CD player, towards the outermost edge, the disc rotation which is very slow starts speeding up more and more until it spins faster than at the beginning of the disc. The audio fades into noise and then the CD player fails finding the track. I am not sure whether this is the case with all CD-RW's or other disc types such as CD-R's. Side note: Some older optical drives might have problems burning unknown brands of optical discs such as burning a CD-RW with the wrong laser strength making it appear blank.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Yes.

I remember when some people had the idea that you could write data in AudioCD format so that you could gain in capacity, without thinking that they sacrifice the necessary volume originally reserved for data integrity.

[–] 1 pt

You might be interested in this (en.everybodywiki.com).

I created it but anyone can edit that page.