Good suggestions here, but if you stick with the DVD medium--and it does have some practical advantages--you might check out this company:http://www.acronova.com/solution.htmlI've used their duplication systems for many years.Ask for Cal, though it's such a small company I think it's just him and overseas providers who build to his specs. Steve Unkles, Production Manager Audio-Visual Archives Media Production and Preservation www.MakeHistory.tv On Monday, May 6, 2019, 3:24:08 PM EDT, Chris Hoogendyk via Hidden-discuss <hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net> wrote: Does anyone have knowledge or experience about DVD drives with respect to writing lots of DVDs without burning out? I've been producing DVDs of historical primary source material (see, e.g., https://www.worldcat.org/title/moreygraham-historical-letters/oclc/904725729) on my grandfather (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Crockett_Graham). In March, I was about to head out to China for a three week trip, and I was pulling an all nighter producing DVDs of my latest project with 23 of his diaries. At 6am on the morning that I was leaving, my DVD drive took the usual length of time to burn a DVD (seems like forever), then it started the verification scan, took a long time and summarily spit out the DVD, saying it was unable to verify it. I went through 4 DVDs with the same result. This was from a stack of 100 good quality Sony DVDs that I had been pulling from for quite a while with no problems. At the point that the drive failed, I had been burning DVDs non-stop for well over 12 hours. All told on this round going back a couple of days, I had burned something like 50-60 DVDs. Previously, I had used the drive to burn other DVDs. This is not the first time I have had this experience. Maybe the third. (i.e. bought a new drive and then had it burn out.) I'm using an iMac which I think is about 2014, running MacOS Mojave, with an Apple USB Superdrive. Googling reviews of drives is pretty useless. They basically tell you they bought the drive, it hooked up without any trouble, it worked great, and it is built solidly; or something like that. They don't give long term wear and reliability. They don't say anything about non-stop burning sessions; just normal easy use with a brand new device. I asked this question of a "genius" at the Apple Store this weekend, and he didn't really have an answer. He suggested that perhaps I should buy a less expensive drive, because the internals would be the same. He said Sony made some pretty good drives, they just didn't have the aluminum case, etc. that the Apple drive has, but would be half or less the cost. It would be great to have a Consumer Reports "mean time to failure under continuous burning" and whether there are any drives with different, more durable, internals. -- --------------- Chris Hoogendyk - O__ ---- Systems Administrator c/ /'_ --- Biology & Geosciences Departments (*) \(*) -- 315 Morrill Science Center ~~~~~~~~~~ - University of Massachusetts, Amherst <hoogendyk at bio.umass.edu> --------------- Erdös 4 _______________________________________________ Hidden-discuss mailing list - home page: http://www.hidden-tech.net Hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net You are receiving this because you are on the Hidden-Tech Discussion list. If you would like to change your list preferences, Go to the Members page on the Hidden Tech Web site. http://www.hidden-tech.net/members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.hidden-tech.net/pipermail/hidden-discuss/attachments/20190507/57d53ce0/attachment.html>