Duplicating CDs or DVDs

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Churches or ministries record videos or audios of their speakers preaching their sermons.
Most of these recorders still use the magnetic tape so they need to transfer these recordings before they can reproduce it.
Some of them just want to share these live recordings to the congregation for their own private use.
If you are doing this often, then you need the proper equipment to duplicate CDs or DVDs.
Replicating a CD or DVD on a desktop computer is a slow way of duplication.
A usual standard CD/DVD ROM writer installed into majority of computers today can deliver the task but, at speeds of 48x or higher, the copies written on these drives are not reliable.
The higher the speed used when burning CDs or DVDs, the higher is the possibility of errors; you'll get a warning about "cyclic redundancy.
" That means a computer cannot read the copy either in part or as a whole, you have wasted another blank disc and have to repeat the process for the nth time.
The writing speed that is advisable is only about 16 xs and at this pace it would take more than a few minutes to duplicate a single disc.
To reproduce CDs & DVDs reliably and efficiently you have to invest on a medium volume disc duplicator costing from 200 to 700 dollars.
These machines are made up of stacks of disc drives that are capable of writing up to 12 copies of a disc at the same time.
There are more expensive machines costing from 1100 dollars & up that can make over 100 copies at one time.
All drives in a CD or DVD duplicating machine are designed to burn at about 22 xs without writing errors.
These devices are equipped with sizeable memory buffers in order to produce more dependable write operations.
Built-in bins feed multiple stacked blank discs per drive automatically.
There are also "pass or fail" counters that check if a disc has no errors in them.
These machines not only write multiple discs but also automatically prints and affixes labels of your design to the discs.
They also slip each disc into either a paper sleeve or a jewel case.
They place in the case covers made of cardboard.
On top of all this, they keep inventories of the completed discs and the blank ones.
All these work requires a lot of time & effort if done manually.
But it is all a breeze with a CD/DVD duplicator.
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