Archival CD-R From Delkin
The patented Phthalocyanine dye is the most critical component of the CD-R because
it is where your data is stored. Your CD burner creates pits in the dye layer
when it burns a CD-R and your digital information is stored in these pits. The
Phthalocyanine dye reacts quickly to the writing laser, thus making sharper
pit edges and making your CD-R easier to read by CD drives. Compared to Cyanine
and Azo dyes found in the majority of CD-R's on the market, Phthalocyanine
dye is said to last significantly longer when subjected to the harmful effects
of UV light, heat, and humidity.
Gold is one of the most inert elements on earth and Delkin incorporates 20¢
of 24k gold into every eFilm Archival Gold disc. Gold's inert characteristics
prevent oxidation, a common cause of failure to most CD-Rs. Along with the Phthalocyanine
dye and gold reflective layer, eFilm Archival Gold CD-R's provide the
most extreme protection for your digital images from environmental degradation.
The Delkin CD-R 10 Pack will be sold in a protective plastic case that holds
10 CD-R's in polypropylene sleeves. There will be a 1" 3 ring binder
available with 16 eFilm Archival Gold CD-R's in protective sleeves. The
25 pack will be available in a cake box type spindle. Delkin also plans to ship
100 CD-R's in bulk packaging. eFilm Archival Gold CD-R's will be
available at consumer photography and electronic stores worldwide and online
at Delkin's website at www.delkin.com.
For more on the technical background on this subject you can download the white
paper at www.archivalgold.com.
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