The difference
between CD DVD Duplication and CD DVD
Replication tends to cause confusion with
clients. While the end result may not seem to be
noticeable or of any consequence, the processes and
the final product are actually very different.
The difference is
important to know when you're preparing a project,
because the difference between CD DVD Duplication
and CD DVD Replication affects price, the product
turn-time and the quality.
In short, replication
is a manufacturing process that creates CD and DVD
discs from scratch with the data being integral to
the discs when they are made. This is much different
to duplication which uses pre-manufactured
CDR and DVDR discs (the "R" stands for "recordable")
that have the data content added to the disc after the
fact.
The
Benefits of CD DVD Replication
Higher quality data image than CD duplication or
DVD duplication.
More resilient and greater durability than
duplicated discs.
No playback issues.
More cost-effective in larger quantities.
Perceived as the
standard for professional quality by consumers.
This video features our DVD5 replication line in
action.
Glass Master and Stamper
The first step
in the replication process is creation of the 'stamper'.
While this process is highly specialized and
technical, the following explanation is intended to
be very basic.
A piece
of highly polished glass is laser-etched with
the digital data from the client's content
master (note: the data from the client's content
master is not altered or changed in any way,
it's strictly a transfer of data).
The
laser-etching creates pits and lands in the
glass in a tightly grouped spiral pattern
emanating from the center and progressing
outwards.
The Glass
Master is then metalized, but it is far too
fragile to be used to replicate discs so the
data must now be transferred to another material
that is resilient enough to handle the
replication process.
The
metalized Glass Master is electroformed with
nickel to produce a "father" master which is a
'negative' image as it has bumps instead of
pits.
The
father master is then electroformed with nickel
to produce "mother" masters which are used as 'stampers'
in the injection molding process.
Injection Molding
Now that the 'stamper'
has been made the replication of the CDs or DVDs can
begin. Again, the process is highly specialized and
technical, so the following explanation is intended
to be basic.
Optical
grade clear polycarbonate pellets are fed into
an injection-molder which creates a clear CD/DVD
disc in its finished size and shape.
During
the creation of the clear disc, the
injection-mold forces the molten polycarbonate
up against the 'stamper' which embeds the pits
and lands into the clear plastic.
An
automated process using robotic arms with vacuum
suction cups transfer the clear discs onto a
conveyor line where they cool.
Metalizing and Lacquering
The
conveyor line carries the clear discs to be
'metalized' with a very thin layer of reflective
aluminum (the laser light from your CD/DVD
player reflects off the aluminum layer to read
the pits and lands that were embedded into the
plastic in the injection-molding process).
For CD
replication, after being metalized the disc is
placed in a spin-coater which spreads a UV
curable clear lacquer evenly across the newly
metalized layer.
Not only
does the lacquer protect the metalized layer but
it also provides a good surface for the printing
of the disc graphics by either Silkscreen
printing or CMYK Offset printing.
For DVD5
replication, instead of having a clear lacquer
coat, an additional clear DVD disc is adhered on
top of the metalized layer with a bonding agent.
This additional clear disc provides the surface
for the printing of the disc graphics.
To cure
the lacquer (or bonding agent) the disc is
automatically placed under a high intensity
Xenon lamp.
After the
lacquer (or bonding agent) has passed through the
curing station the discs are automatically unloaded
from the replication line and stacked on spindles
with a count of 150 discs per spindle.
From there the
discs are taken to the CD DVD disc printing
department.
Factory-direct CD
manufacturing, CD replication, DVD manufacturing, DVD replication. Full service
CD duplication, DVD duplication. Environmentally-friendly print and packaging
including CD digipak, DVD digipak,
CD sleeves, DVD sleeves, CD jackets, DVD jackets. Serving clientele throughout
Canada, including British Columbia (BC), Alberta (AB), Saskatchewan (SK),
Manitoba (MB) and beyond.
Serving clientele throughout the U.S., including Washington State (WA), Oregon
(OR), California (CA), Idaho (ID), Montana (MT) and beyond.