[quote name=\'curtking\' post=\'141919\' date=\'Jan 2 2007, 03:18 PM\']1.
Blank Media Quality Guide and FAQ is a good guide to which media works and which doesn't. [/quote]
That excellent website also has a
page that should calm some fears among those who keep worrying that the format is unreliable. Actually, if you've got it in your head to be scared, this article probably isn't going to do anything to change that, but the average user should read it anyway.
A few more thoughts from someone who makes thousands of discs a year for hundreds of very picky customers:
I see several people insisting you use the 2-hour speed. My experience has been that you're really OK up to the 3-hour speed for most stuff, especially stuff that's originating from crummy old 6-hour VHS tapes in the first place.
Don't use sticky labels to label your DVDs. It has a significant impact on the reliablity of the DVD in certain machines. I only really convinced myself of this fairly recently, so a lot of the really important stuff in my collection is being migrated over to new discs, plus I found myself making a few more replacement copies than usual over the summer when I had a double-whammy of sticky labels and a less-than-perfect batch of discs.
Today, I only use Taiyo Yuden white inkjet printable blank DVDs, and I print high-quality labels directly onto them with an inexpensive (but kinda hard to find) Epson printer. I also store my discs individually in full-size cases, which takes up more room (and is more expensive, of course), but they look great on the shelf and they're a lot easier to find than if they were all stacked up in jewel cases.
Basically, just be careful, which is the same advice you got when you were saving your VHS tapes.