Registered: 10/02/02
Posts: 437
Loc: Silver City, NM USA
Re: Ink smear. To make any item printed with an ink jet printer waterproof, simply lay it flat on a sheet of paper and give it a light spray of either clear spray lacquer or spray matte polyurethane. works like a charm. Just a light spray - don't need much. Works well on high definition color photo prints too. Give it a try, you might like it. Walt
[This message has been edited by Walt Meyer (edited 08-05-2005).]
Smearing on Epson R-series isn't too bad if you let the CD dry well (at least an hour indoors with A/C or more if you can) before you handle it. Yes, it will smear if it gets wet, but not as bad as older ink-jets.
Lightscribe does not begin to compare for presentation - harder to read, no color, looonnngg burn times.
What we need is a commercial spray product designed specifically for this application - as long as it didn't gum up the CD player it'd get my dollar!
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
Registered: 10/02/02
Posts: 437
Loc: Silver City, NM USA
I've used matte spray lacquer on my paper CD labels for quite some time and have heard of no "gum up" problems. Just a light dusting dries in a few minutes to a coating that can not be seen or felt. There would not be anything in a CD player that would soften or desolve the lacquer on the CD. I wouldn't be surprised if the paint that is used by the manufacturer on the direct print CD blanks is of a lacquer base. The problems that I have had with paper labels (sprayed and not sprayed) is that some of the CD players in Chrysler product automobiles have such a small slot that the CD's jam and will not come out due to the added thickness of the paper label. Just my thoughts, Walt
Registered: 05/26/99
Posts: 9673
Loc: Levittown, Pa, USA
Burn time on my HP is under 7 minutes.. Maybe , not pratical for printing a large number of copies..but I like the look.. Shop around I am sure you can find deals on blanks.. Scott ,the DVD burner is a HP DVD writer 640b..
Registered: 06/28/01
Posts: 2792
Loc: Lehigh Valley, Pa.
I'm a little confused. Does this mean that if I purchase the lightscribe hardware burner that I can actually burn data with it?
I presently have both a DVD burner and a CD burner on my PC. What would I do, replace one of these drives with a lightscribe burner? (I don't have enough slots for a third burner.)
If I replace the CD burner with the Lightscribe burner, can I use my present DVD burner to burn data, flip it over and use Lightscribe to print a label? Or must I use the lightscribe only to burn both data and labels.
Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 2206
Loc: Louisiana, USA
I don't think you need anything other than the Lightscribe CDRW. It writes data, then you flip it over, it burns the label.
Fran, you said 7 minutes... is the regardless of how 'busy' the label is? All take 7 minutes or would it vary with density of the burn? Seven minutes, I could live with.
Just saw an external LightScribe burner for $170 (ouch!) at OfficeMax. I think you might find them online for less than $150. (External... internals are less.)