05-08-2004, 08:24 AM | #1 |
Thoth - Egyptian God of Wisdom
Join Date: May 10, 2002
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand.
Age: 42
Posts: 2,860
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Howdy guys. I'm just wondering if anyone here has any experience with repairing/resurfacing scratched CDs.
Alot of my favourite old music CDs are really getting worse for wear. They've gotten a fair few knicks and scratches over the years and starting to skip pretty bad. So any recommendations on what I might do to remedy this (besides buying new copies)? Cheers.
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05-08-2004, 08:40 AM | #2 |
Emerald Dragon
Join Date: February 6, 2003
Location: Norway
Age: 38
Posts: 928
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I haven't had much experience with such, but the CD-rom drives of puters seem to be a tad better at reading scratched CDs than ordinary players. One of my CDs was scratched so bad that most of the tracks were impossible to listen to, but when I ripped mp3s off it they were all fine. So... you might wanna try'n burn backups of bad CDs.
[ 05-08-2004, 08:43 AM: Message edited by: Gnarf ]
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05-08-2004, 11:32 AM | #3 |
Zartan
Join Date: July 18, 2001
Location: America, On The Beautiful Earth
Age: 50
Posts: 5,373
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Skip Doctor is the product I use. It also goes by the name Game Doctor and DVD Doctor but they are all the exact same product with a different name.
Link I have used both the model I linked to as well as the mechanized version (skipdoctor MD). It works great! |
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