Blank DVD RW


  • Blank DVD RW (3)
  • Reviews (4)
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1
Fujifilm DVD+R 16x (4.7 GB)
Listed since 07/2009
DVD
"At £35 per 100 discs, this option represents excellent value for money, even if a few of them don't work."
1 Review
 
 
2
Delkin Device Archival Gold Scratch Armor DVD-R (10 Pack)
Listed since 07/2009
DVD
"Ten packs of these discs come in a handy storage box with sleeves inside to store your back-ups safely."
2 Reviews
 
 
  Verbatim DVD-R DL 12x (8.5 GB)
Listed since 10/2009
DVD
"A re-writable DVD-R costs much more than a single-burn disc, so you should only buy them if you intend to use them more than once."
1 Review
 
 
"Delkin Archival Gold Scratch Armor DVD-R"
1 Blank DVD-rw media
Practical Photography
Issue 8/2009
On test: Delkin Device Archival Gold Scratch Armor DVD-R (10 Pack)
"If your photos are important to you, and you want to ensure you have them forever, storing them on a normal CD/DVD, on which, under ideal conditions they last 30 years max, might not be safe enough. Delkin have a solution with this high quality disk." Review details: Single Test    Test results

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Blank DVD RW

More and more people are opting for DVD rather than a standard CD when backing up and writing data from their PCs. This is not too surprising, a DVD offers more than six times the storage space of a 700MB CD. This is more than enough space for a good quality movie or a whole number of albums. For data that will likely change, like a system backup, a DVD-RW is the best choice. This can be written to an rewritten many times over up to a quoted 100 times. The quality will remain sufficiently high as to keep your data safe for years. Technically, aside from their rewritability, DVD-RWs are identical to a standard DVDr, they can be read by almost every newer DVD player and DVD-ROM drive. DVD-RW was developed as a counter technology to DVD-RAM, another rewritable DVD format that can be written to over and over again. The DVD-RAM disc never really caught on and DVD-RW emerged early on as the victor.