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DVD Duplicators
We
will meet your needs with our line of CD/DVD products.
Microboards DVD Duplicators
We offer Pioneer DVD Tower Duplicators , industry leading Cd
Duplicators and
Color DVD Printers
Let Copy Writer Live bring digital quality audio
to your church, school, studio, or boardroom! The CopyWriter Live combines
the flexibility of cassette tapes with the quality and longevity of CDs,
in one low-cost, easy to use unit. You can record from practically any
audio source, including live feed from a microphone, a cassette deck,
a mixer, and many others. Make a high quality CD on the first try, every
time, or make backup copies of audio or data for long-term storage. You
can even span from disc to disc to record non-stop for hours on end.
Advanced Features: Standalone 20X CD Duplication with automatic format
detection Record and Pause to create multiple tracks for playback
Black set-top configuration with 2U rackmount kit included Audio CDs
created play back in virtually any CD player Supported duplication
formats include CD Rom Mode 1&2, CD-DA (Red Book), CD-ROM/XA, Mixed
Mode, Multi-Session, HFS CD Bridge, CD Extra, Video CD
Specifications:Two 20X CD-R/RW Drives, LCD System Display 2 Pairs of
RCA Inputs (1 rear/1front) One Pair of RCA Outputs (Rear) One 1/4 Inch
Microphone Input (Front) One Pair of XLR (Balanced) inputs (Rear)
Headphone monitoring jack - 1/4 Inch Mechanical/Electrical: Signal to
Noise Ratio: 90dB Power Supply: AC 90V-264V Dimensions:
11.5D x 16.5W x 4.25H Weight: 12.25 Lbs Spanning: A Microboards
Exclusive Feature Copy Writer Live is the only direct-to-disc audio
recorder that features the ability to continually record by seamlessly
utilizing the second recorder as the first recorder becomes full.
See also Bulk Blank DVDs
Blank CDs
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Cd Duplicator

CD players use light emitting diode lasers, which are compact and low
cost, to read the data contained in pits in the surface of the disc.The
laser diode is mounted on a swivel arm which can be moved in a radial
direction across the disc surface while the disc is rotated. This
allows the laser beam to follow the pits accurately.
A semi-reflective mirror allows the reflected light to pass back to
a photo detector. When the laser beam falls on a pit very little is
reflected. The changing light pattern detected is then converted into a
series of zeros and ones which are then decoded into the original audio
or computer data signal.
Unlike laserdiscs, CDs use a digital technique where the pits
indicate whether a data bit is '0' or '1'. Also laserdiscs can be
either CAV (Constant Angular Velocity) or CLV (Constant Linear Velocity),
but all CDs use CLV. This means that the pit sizes do not vary from
inside to outside of the disc but the angular velocity does vary.
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