Recording Technology
DVD
recorders record via laser onto a blank disc. A DVD has the
samediameter and thickness as a CD and is made using the same
manufacturingmethods and materials. DVDs resemble CDs with encoded data
in the formof small pits and bumps in the track of the disc. A DVD is
made up ofseveral layers of plastic about 1.2 millimetres thick and
every layeris composed by injection moulding polycarbonate plastic. The
disc isformed with microscopic bumps arranged as a single, continuous
spiraltrack of data.
After the polycarbonate pieces are
formed, a thin reflective layer islayered onto the disc, covering the
bumps. The inner layer is coatedwith aluminium, while the outer layer
is coated with semi-reflectivegold for the laser to pass through the
outer and onto the inner layers.After the formation of the layers, each
layer is coated with lacquer,squeezed together and cured under infrared
light. Some single sideddiscs have silk-screen labels put onto the
non-readable side, whiledouble-sided discs are printed only on the
non-readable area in themiddle of the disc, near the hole.
The
writable layer of DVD has data in spiral form and the track circlesfrom
the inside of the disc to the outside on single layer DVDs. Thismeans
that a single-layer DVD can be as small as 12 centimetres indiameter.
The microscopic dimensions of the bumps make the spiral trackon a DVD
staggeringly long: if a single layer data track were stretchedinto a
straight line, it would measure 7.5 miles long. A double sidedor double
layer DVD would extend up to 30 miles!
Each data track is
separated with just 740 nanometres and the elongatedbumps that
constitute the track are 320 nanometres wide, 400 nanometreslong and
120 nanometres high. The familiar term ‘pits’ on a DVD appearson the
aluminium side, but the side that laser reads from are bumps. Inorder
to read bumps this small, you need an extremely precisedisc-reading
mechanism. DVD discs lasts for years, since there is nophysical contact
between the laser that reads the disc and the discitself.
Compatible Formats
Generally
there are five recordable versions of DVD including DVD-R,DVD-RW,
DVD+R, DVD+RW and DVD-RAM. DVD-RAM, DVD-RW and DVD+RW can berewritten
thousands of times, while DVD-R and DVD+R can record dataonly once.
DVD-RAM is a removable storage device for computers andvideo recording
and is known for its flexibility in editing andrecording. DVD-R/RW and
DVD+R/RW are highly competitive and have becomethe standard format;
however they both have similar functions. Theintroduction of Set Top
DVD recorders and DVD burners allows recordingin both + and – format.
The recording speed is denoted in values of Xand 1X. This is equal to
1.321 MB equivalent to 9X CD-ROM and isconfined to computer based DVD
recorders. Standalone units record inreal time (compressing the picture
data with MPEG-2) 1X speed.
Conclusion
DVD
recorders are becoming ever more advanced with some players
nowintroducing hard disk based DVR that records onto large fixed
harddisks. This feature is extremely useful as you can conveniently
accessrecordings whenever you want to without the need to find and
insert adisc. With its advanced technology and additional features, a
DVDrecorder is a useful and, nowadays affordable device to protect
yourfavourite movies and shows for posterity.
Find a guide to buying DVD Recorders at www.tribaluk.com
Article Source: http://www.theukarticledirectory.co.uk