does anyone sharpie thier CD's???


its amazing. take a wedge sharpie, and color in the outermost edge of the CD.. then color in the center flat area, and the innermost edge... when you hold the CD up to light, you should not see any coming through..... so actually before you do this, pick a track, turn it up and listen,,,,, then color in the disc, without adjuting the volume, listen again..... i get more volume, calrity and depth...... check this out!!
jonnytanner

Showing 3 responses by jonnytanner

shadorne thanks for the lesson, i am quite aware of the power of suggestion, and "PLACEBO" effect,,,, and believe me i tried this on many discs, and always wanted to discover that it was in my mind....... but it is not...... every person i have showed this too, audiophile or not, jumps back in disbeliefe when the colored disc plays..... i think you should try it...... instead of just arm chairing it.... just sayin. :)
since there is no explanation for this, only theories... this has changed how i view the digital domain.... first there is a gain of data from the coloring???? if we assume this, then there is generational loss in the CD formatt... (previously unheard of) also why not precolor a CDR prior to recording, (better transfer) also DVD's may improve, etc..... i had the chance with a CD and new pressing of a record, to do a comparison... CD first, vinyl next, colored CD, and vinyl.... i am thinking that there has always been all of the music on the CD..... in other words, the colored CD sounded as solid as the vinyl.. i have all Musical Fidelity KW system. B&W 802 spkrs...... ????
well i suppose that a reduced error rate seems the most plausible. it would still be worth it?? try it