T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1472.1 | Dollar extractor | HPSTEK::BROWN | | Tue Jan 10 1989 13:15 | 6 |
| Sounds like a solution to a non problem.
Either the disc has been made right, in which case you don't need
it, or it hasn't, in which case return it for exchange.
Barry, in marlboro,mass.
|
1472.2 | So that's what that red thing is!! | WOODRO::GAUTHIER | | Tue Jan 10 1989 14:37 | 8 |
|
I recently bought a CD from the CDSWAP notes file. I was wondering
what that thing was on the disk. I haven't really seen that it
makes any difference in the sound. The disk hasn't had any skips
but none of my other disks have either. I agree with Barry in
Marlboro. > It does sound like a solution to a non problem.<
Tim
|
1472.3 | Snake Oil | AQUA::ROST | Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny | Tue Jan 10 1989 14:46 | 8 |
|
Interesting how this "perfect" medium needs some assistance from
damping rings and lens cleaners.
More interesting is how consumers bought the perfection story and
now are swallowing the "this will make it perfect again" story....
|
1472.4 | Try it, you might like it | AUGGIE::SEGOOL | | Wed Jan 11 1989 06:20 | 24 |
|
I saw the damping rings at Natural Sound and being curious decided
to try them. It cost 5 bucks for a starter kit which comes with
5 rings and a rubber piece that allows you to center the rings on
the disc. I have some discs that sound terrible, very harsh and
I heard that the rings may help.
Well, In MY opinion there was a VERY noticable difference. There
was a definite improvement in the sound quality. I think the rings
may be more obvious on certain discs then on others. At least that
has been my experience. I believe the reason they are supposed to
work is that they lessen the vibration of the disc, which is causing
errors. I'm not any kind of authority on CD theory but
possibly there is an improvemt in sound quality when everything
is free of vibration. I know the turntable folks go to all lengths
to stop vibration.
I know that there is alot of hype in this industry but before we
all start declaring something is a fraud we could at least try the
thing out. Five bucks is not going to break most of us.
Just an opinion.
Mike
|
1472.5 | thoughts | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Wed Jan 11 1989 08:25 | 30 |
| Does "applied to the outside edge" mean exactly that - a metal ring
around the edge, rather than on the top at the edge? (I've never
seen these.)
I'd be skeptical for two reasons:
1) How does it attach? If there's any kind of adhesive, that adhesive
might attack the lacquer on the top surface and kill the disc
permanently over time. If it attaches mechanically, might the process
of attaching it break the seal that keeps air out of the CD and
cause the aluminum to corrode?
2) Many players, especially portables, have *very* little clearance
around the disc. Might this not make the disc rub somewhere? (Some
people complain that their portables rub discs even without these
rings.)
Maybe it works, but I have no problem that desparately needs solving.
I'd sure want to hear a lot more about this before trying it - and I'm
inclined to let someone else be the guinea pig and risk their CDs, not
mine.
B
B
|
1472.6 | | AUGGIE::SEGOOL | | Wed Jan 11 1989 10:22 | 12 |
|
The rings are a rubber type material that have an adhesive on one
side. They are applied to the label side on the outside edge . I
don't know if the adhesive can eat away the plastic. You would hope not.
I have a Sony CDP510 and don't have any problems playing CDs with
rings. I have heard that some machines won't take them. Also, they
say that if you put them on don't try taking them off because they
won't come off without damaging the CD.
Mike
|
1472.7 | Wanny buy a bridge? | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Thu Jan 12 1989 06:35 | 13 |
| Damping rings are pure hype. What comes off the disk is a string of
numbers. In the case of errors, there is ECC to correct any but
the most grievous of problems, and a disc that is so bad as to not
be ECC correctable over the entire disk is outside the manufacturing
tolerance standards by orders of magnitude. Repeated tests by
audio magazines have shown that uncorrectable errors in discs are
almost unheard of.
If the error is correctable, it's PERFECTLY correctable. Damping rings
aren't going to make any more difference on your disks than if you
hung them from your ears.
Steve
|
1472.8 | The Rings Can Help! | PNO::WILHELMS | | Thu Jan 12 1989 11:37 | 30 |
| Actually those rings will improve the sound of a CD in
some cases.
What can happen is vibrations in the player can cause
UNCORRECTABLE read errors. This is do to the momentatry
speed changes when these vibrations accur. These
UNCORRECTABLE read errors usually manifest themselve by
Very brief dropouts of sound. In many cases, the dropouts
will make the sound coming out of the player sound harsh.
If the error is a bigger one, you may actually hear the
momentary dropout. But again, it is usually too fast
to hear other than the "by-product" of harsh sound.
The rings add mass to the disk which will dampen out some
of the smaller vibrations. This will produce a cleaner
sound.
Those rings won't fix all of these problems but they do
work. May manufacturers of disk players know about this
problem and go through great lengths, in some cases, to
try and isolate the disk spindle from external vibration.
That brings up another point; CD players don't like even
small vibrations. These small vibrations such as loud
playing levels from near by speakers can cause read errors
which may show up as making the CD sound harsh.
Car CD players are very hard to design because of this
problem. That is one of the reasons they cost more.
|
1472.9 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Thu Jan 12 1989 19:26 | 13 |
| Sorry, I don't believe it. Repeated tests show that uncorrectable
errors on normal (non-defective) disks are extremely rare. Most
causes of uncorrectable errors are damaged disks, and no amount of
"damping" will help that.
As for car CD players, the problem is that large vibrations cause the
player to mistrack. This involves jostling of the pickup sled, and
again, vibrations of the disk itself are meaningless.
Go ahead and stick these things on your disks if you want - they
look pretty. But there's no evidence that they actually do anything.
Steve
|
1472.10 | I know what I hear | AUGGIE::SEGOOL | | Fri Jan 13 1989 05:59 | 9 |
|
Steve,
Two questions.
Where do your repeated tests come from ?
Have you ever heard a demo of the rings ?
Mike
|
1472.11 | | GRAMPS::FORTIER | | Fri Jan 13 1989 06:17 | 20 |
|
To add to this discussion,
I have to agree with Steve (-.2) on the hard, uncorrectable
error rate. Now I don't know about Steve's data. But, mine is from
the RQT (Reliability Qualification Test) that Digital ran on the
RRD50. The RRD50 is the very first CDROM player built by anyone
that I know of. We ran about 40 drives for about 6 months with a
specially designed test disc that had known data patterns, and forced
errors imbedded into it. The occurance of the errors we are talking
about is very rare. I was on the RRD50 project from its conception.
I tend to agree with Steve, a damping device will not make hard
uncorrectable errors go away. I can't think of much that would.
The ECC on the drives is quite good too.
"Digital has it now,......and it's been in test for the past
3 years!" What a distribution medium for software!
John
|
1472.12 | pointless argument, easily settled | DSSDEV::CHALTAS | What kind of fuel am I? | Fri Jan 13 1989 07:05 | 26 |
| This is a *bad* subject for an audiophile-type argument, because
we're talking about a digital medium. Whether the rings help
or not can be easily verified if someone has the test equipment.
The argument *for* the rings is that they decrease the number of
uncorrectable errors (presumably caused by disk vibration, in turn
presumably caused by imperfect disks). Since CD decoding chips
*know* when they get uncorrectable errors, this data can be
collected. Build a device that counts these errors (some CD
decoding chips have an output that fires when such an error is
detected, I'm told). Get a few hundred disks. Play them a bunch
of times both with and without rings attached (to the *same* disks).
Tally the error counts. If the rings help, it will be manisfest
in consistently lower error counts for the disks with the
ring, as opposed to the *same* disk without the ring.
To my knowledge, none of the damping-ring vendors has published
the results of such a test. My cynical side suggests that this
is because no such test has been done, and the folks selling
the rings *are* selling snake oil. It *might* actually work,
but I doubt that the folks selling the rings know if it does
or not, and I'm pretty sure they don't really care so long as
you buy their product.
George
|
1472.13 | Out of balance? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | just a revolutionary with a pseudonym | Fri Jan 13 1989 07:59 | 38 |
|
I've read recently that it is common for the error correcting
mechanism in CD players to make up to 20 corrections/second in normal
playing. I dont know if these are "single bit" or "single word"
corrections, however.
Since the 44.1 Khz sampling frequency is within a knat's *ss
of the Nyquist frequency, a few words missing and the corresponding
interpolation could make for a harsher sounding high end, I think.
Most CD players use a stepper motor, I'd bet, for spinning the
disk. This would afford easy digital control over the motor speed,
with the rotational mass of the disk and spindle integrating the
pulses into a smoother motion. Massing up the disk makes it a better
integrator and will give a smoother, more consistant angular velocity.
Of course, since this is a digital system, as long as the specified
d2@/dt is met, any improvement has no effect. Do we assume that
this is met;
- all of the time, for any disk?
- most of the time, for most disks?
- just barely, with your best disk?
I dont know.
*Possibly*, this could effect the error rate coming off the
disk and in turn, reduce the number of "big" interpolations the
correcting circuitry would have to make. However, what happens if
you dont center this additional weight *perfectly* and cause this
disk to be out of balance? Ruin the disk, apparently.
Perhaps they'll give some sort of digital display for the
relative "quality level" of the playback, expressed in terms of
the number and kinds of corrections the player had to make to deliver
the sound, on future machines.
Joe Jas
|
1472.14 | Stuff | WONDER::STRANGE | Strange, isn't it? | Fri Jan 13 1989 08:54 | 33 |
| re:.13
> Since the 44.1 Khz sampling frequency is within a knat's *ss
>of the Nyquist frequency
I'm not sure I understand what you mean here. The Nyquist frequency
is always half the sampling frequency. I think you may mean the
*Nyquist* frequency is only slightly higher than what the (best)
human ear can detect, yes?
>, a few words missing and the corresponding
>interpolation could make for a harsher sounding high end, I think.
I thought that the ECC was successful in correcting errors, not
merely interpolating to find the missing values. If the error rate
is low enough, the code should be robust enough to completely correct
for soft errors.
> Most CD players use a stepper motor, I'd bet, for spinning the
>disk. This would afford easy digital control over the motor speed,
I'd bet not; I would assume they use a frequency servo-controlled
motor, and spit the data into a circular buffer. When the buffer
starts to get full, slow down the disc a little, when it gets empty,
speed it up a bit. You know, like negative feedback. I don't think
there's a need for the ability to specify the motor speed exactly,
just to make incremental changes based on the output rate of data.
Sorry, I'm ratholing the subject I guess. But until someone performs
the test that George suggests, the ring damper arguement is probably
moot.
Steve
|
1472.15 | CD-ROM uses more ECC than CD-Audio | MODEL::NEWTON | | Fri Jan 13 1989 10:07 | 7 |
|
I doubt that these "damping rings" do any good at all -- but I don't
think that the number of uncorrectable errors found by a CDROM drive
is the right statistic to be measuring. To the best of my knowledge,
the CDROM format employs more error correction than CD Audio format,
with the rationale being that errors in audio output tend to be less
noticeable than errors in stored computer programs and data . . .
|
1472.16 | Answers, or more questions? | GRAMPS::FORTIER | | Fri Jan 13 1989 10:43 | 40 |
|
Here we go with a real technical discussion the CD/CDROM formats...
Let me see if I can shed some light here;
o CD players do realtime ECC for correctable errors
encountered while reading the disk.
o The only time an interpolation is done is when the ECC
can't correct the data.
o The ECC on a CD is extensive, the data is scattered over
a 2,000 bit area on a given "track", and the ECC can correct
multiple symbols in error. A symbol is not a bit, or a byte,
or a word. It's just a very specific collection of bits.
o DEC's RRD products have additional layers of ECC built into
the data format we put onto the disc, DSA defines the way
this is done.
o The speed of rotation is determined by the data coming off
of the disc itself. It is a complex set of feedback mechanisms
that keep the disc spinning at a rate sufficient to keep the
right number of bits coming in. PLL's etc...
o Uncorrectable errors are rare.
I could go on and on about the technicalities of a CD/CDROM player.
Basically the 2 are the same. Just that with the CDROM the error
signal output goes to the system for error recovery, not to another
chip to interpolate the sound for you.
My source for most of this is the RRD50 Tech. Man. (EK-RRD50-TD)
John
|
1472.17 | FWIW | KANE::CASTIGLIONE | Heavy Metal Thunder | Tue Jan 17 1989 08:06 | 3 |
| There's an article in today's Boston Herald on Disc rings.
Stig
|
1472.18 | Sounds like a kludge to me.... | BETHE::LICEA_KANE | | Tue Jan 17 1989 11:43 | 66 |
|
For what it's worth....
Many folks here are confusing interpolation and error correction.
The former loses information, the latter does not.
And, it doesn't take a golden ear to hear interpolation. I've got
the killer cold thingies invading my ears right now, and the
antibiotics are taking their sweet old time dealing with the
hostile forces. Yet I can assure you, that if I did a listening
to two players *today*, one interpolating, the other not, I'll quickly
point out which one is being not nice.
You see, every once in a rare while, my CD player goes into some
sort of resonance. Don't know why, but the disc and/or servo will
"hummmmmmmmm" audibly. Sounds a little like a very quiet glass
harmonica.
When this happens, the sound is awful. That's because bits are
not being corrected by the ECC, but are being interpolated.
Sorry, I'm not into the latest golden ear rhetoric, but oh, lets just
say that the sound stage is compressed to the zeroth dimension, beyond
blured at any rate, ah, there is a stealiness and edginess to the
sound, and, hmmm, just for good measure, it sounds discrete.
In english, all the above nonsense means that the sound is awful.
Shortly, it will go beyond just awful, to horrible. There will be
quite audible drop offs of sound, where even interpolation gives
up and says "Sorry, I'll just be quiet, for I haven't a clue".
Finally, the CD player begins to lose the ability to track the disc
at all.
When this happens, a second disc layed on top of the disc that I
wish to play "cures" the problem every time I've tried.
But I don't much wish to treat my discs or my player to such
attrocities, so I've not tried that very often.
Instead, I HOWL an incantation or two or three (the FCC would not
approve) and take the disc out and put it back into again.
Repeating several times often "solves" the problem. I'm not at all
sure if it's the incantations or the replacing the disc that does the
trick, not having done a scientific controlled study. Perhaps both are
required.
Oh, at first I thought it might be a problem with only certain discs.
But this does not seem to be so, it is quite quite random.
So, having said all that, it is *possible* that such rings actually
do do something. I, however, would not spend the money on such
nonsense. I would instead spend the money on getting a new CD player
with a more stable servo system. Or at least one with oxygen free
plastic. I mean, who wants rusty plastic?
(Finally, there's a nodename called KANE::?)
-mr. bill
|
1472.19 | Question for John Fortier | MPGS::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Jan 17 1989 12:04 | 8 |
| Re:1472.16
John...I have often wondered what technology is used to make the "
master"disk's grooves.I.E. what is the distance between the grooves on
the cd and how do they make the master.I assume that the copies are
"pressed" from the master copy.Do you know the technique???
Marc H.
|
1472.20 | | GRAMPS::FORTIER | | Tue Jan 17 1989 13:07 | 27 |
|
Marc,
Funny you should ask! When I was working on the CDROM projext
we got a tour of the Polygram plant in Germany. The mastering
facility is seperate from the pressing plant. The mastering plant
we say looked much like Hudson does. Clean rooms, bunny suits, etc.
The masters we worked with for CDROM applications were very close
to the mastering set up for normal CD's. They have a VERY precise
laser set up with VERY precise servo control. The master is written,
read and verified for quality standards. If I remember right that
implies a low number of ECC, and no uncorrectables. The master is
then pressed to make fathers, the faters are then pressed to make
mothers, the mothers are then used to make discs, for a while. At
the end of the useable like of the mother they toss it and replace
it with another mother to then press more CD's for us consumers.
The whole process was then made more difficult by DEC when we
built a VAX frontend to master discs for data use. We had to cut
into the datat stream a bit to get the data in the format that we
wanted. Philips I believe licenses this mastering set up based on
a VAX for resale. Yea, VAX's are used to master some CDROM discs!
The process was very interesting. It was also a lot of fun trying
to develop the process to get CDROM's mastered so that the FOO.EXE
file didn't get interpolated when VMS read it!
What's a bit between friends!!!
John
|
1472.21 | Possible use for those d*mn damping rings? | DECSIM::BERRETTINI | Jim, DTN 225-5671 | Tue Jan 17 1989 13:40 | 11 |
| This is slightly off the subject, but I recently got a free TELARC
sampler for purchasing a pair of Sennheiser headphones. Playing this
disc has been ear-itating, as there seems to be excess vibration (the
disc visibly wobbles, about 1/8"), and this leads to a harsh, low
volume resonance. Perhaps this is the sort of problem a disc ring
solves. If I had actually purchased the disc, I would return it, but it
seems petty to complain, especially since the drive to the place of
purchase would probably cost more than the value of the disc.
Jim
|
1472.22 | | MPGS::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Jan 17 1989 13:47 | 5 |
| RE 1472.20
John,thanks for the info! Do you happen to know the spacing between
tracks?
Marc H.
|
1472.23 | | GRAMPS::FORTIER | | Tue Jan 17 1989 21:20 | 6 |
|
Marc,
The track pitch is 1.6 microns on center, with a bit width
of 1.0 microns. If I remember correctly...
John
|
1472.24 | | VAXWRK::CONNOR | We are amused | Wed Jan 18 1989 09:54 | 10 |
| I've got a CD that drives me crazy. It must be placed just
so or otherwise I get 'dropouts'. I thought for awhile that
I had a defective CD and was going to send it back for
replacement but I had a few times later and it was perfect.
After that someone played and behold a couple of dropouts
occured but not in the same places. This is the only cd that
acts that way. I am wondering if the CD is so lite that it
does not seat properly and supposedly that is what the rings
do.
|
1472.25 | Times never change... | STAR::JACOBI | Paul Jacobi - VAX/VMS Development | Wed Jan 18 1989 15:49 | 12 |
|
'Back in the old days', I remember taping pennies and nickels to the
tone arm of my record player to "improve" tracking. It solved the
tracking problems for a while, but eventually, all my records were
were ruined. I ended up buying a new turntable.
I suggest that the 'CD rings' are a similar type of "solution" with
possible hazards, which only masks the real problems.
-Paul
|