Cracked disk repair possible??

Discussion in 'Repair, Restoration, Conservation and Preservation' started by Dano2k0, Apr 20, 2010.

  1. Dano2k0

    Dano2k0 Mad on XBOX

    Joined:
    Jan 1, 2006
    Messages:
    421
    Likes Received:
    22
    Hi guys,

    Ok i'm wondering if someone here can help me, i have quite an important disk that i need to repair. It has been damaged during transit and cracked pretty much in to two.

    Now on the slight plus side, the disk remains whole as the backing i think is still holding this together, so hopefully the data isn't damaged, and its simply the plastic layer.

    Is there any possible way to fix this properly? any companies that do disk repair that are capable of fixing this? or any DIY attempts i may be able to try?

    Thanks for your replies :)
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2010
  2. alphagamer

    alphagamer What is this? *BRRZZ*.. Ouch!

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2008
    Messages:
    3,255
    Likes Received:
    10
    The actual data is burned into the plastic layer, the backing is just the reflective dye, holds no data.

    ...

    How the hell did that happen? It is really hard to break a disc in two.
    ...

    But back on topic: If the disc is REALLY important get some pros to recover the data, can be expensive though.
     
  3. Dano2k0

    Dano2k0 Mad on XBOX

    Joined:
    Jan 1, 2006
    Messages:
    421
    Likes Received:
    22
    I always thought the data was held in or close to the reflective backing and was 'pitted' in? Was pretty sure it was something like that, i know you can skim loads off the plastic surface of the disk and it will still be fine. I thought also the reason when you burned a disk and it changed colour was due to the backing.

    The disk in question is actually an Xbox disk, an Xbox during transit slid and snapped it in half, gutted :(

    Its pretty important, though a copy i don't think would be of use, i needed the disk to work again, although i doubt it will be possible to send it off somewhere for repair. I would have been happy to pay a reasonable price for it repairing if it was even possible..

    Thanks for the reply though.
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2010
  4. alphagamer

    alphagamer What is this? *BRRZZ*.. Ouch!

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2008
    Messages:
    3,255
    Likes Received:
    10
    The only chance you have to recover the data would be a copy, sadly. If you glue the disc together, be advised that it spins with up to 500 rpm, huge centrifugal forces at work here. The disc will crash your drive, if you are unlucky.
     
  5. Dano2k0

    Dano2k0 Mad on XBOX

    Joined:
    Jan 1, 2006
    Messages:
    421
    Likes Received:
    22
    Hmm,

    Been thinking long and hard about my options here and ive thought of something that MIGHT get me a chance at somewhat fixing it, though it would never be quite the same again..

    I was thinking about carefully glueing the disk together with a spot of either plastic glue or super glue, being as carefull as possible to try and keep the disk perfectly lined up.

    Then i was thinking i'd need to add some good strength, now the issue i'm thinking about will be thickness as some drives may not like a double thickness disk, i was simply thinking about using a clear end cover off a pack of burnable disks, and glueing this on to the top of my disk?

    Now the issue is quite simple, it would be double the thickness that it should be. I don't know if this will become an issue, i suspect it may.

    The options are then, wet sand this disk down so its thinner, polish it back up etc and then glue it ontop.

    I was also thinking of lacqureing the under side of the current broken disk to ensure particals can't get into the cracks on the disk, it may also help 'merge' the disk back together.

    Its quite possible none of these ideas will work, but some thoughts if come up with so far in the attempt to rescue this disk..
     
  6. rso

    rso Gone. See y'all elsewhere, maybe.

    Joined:
    Mar 26, 2010
    Messages:
    2,190
    Likes Received:
    447
    I really, really don't think that's gonna work, since you'd need to properly align the parts of data track... Unless I misunderstood and it's actually only kinda half-cracked. Well, good luck anyways.

    You might wanna grab an old drive to use though - the slower the better, to reduce the stress on the disc! - to not damage your "good" drive should the disk get torn apart.
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2010
  7. alphagamer

    alphagamer What is this? *BRRZZ*.. Ouch!

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2008
    Messages:
    3,255
    Likes Received:
    10
    A glued disc will burst into pieces.
     
  8. randyrandall

    randyrandall Guest

    Whatever you do, don't glue it and then shove it back into a drive. It will explode/shatter/fuck something up.
    I would have sggested googling dedicated data recovery services. Very very expensive but they may be able to help. If its an xbox game, however, it's going to be cheaper to just buy the game again. Lesson learned- don't leave any disc in any drive whilst moving the unit!
     
  9. Dano2k0

    Dano2k0 Mad on XBOX

    Joined:
    Jan 1, 2006
    Messages:
    421
    Likes Received:
    22
    Guys,

    The disk isn't in two seperate pieces, the backing kept it together and aligned properly, it was still as one piece, just cracked. The data layer is cracked worse, as on one side of the disk it has a 'spliter' of disk cracked.

    I have glued very carefully the edges of the disk upto the point where the data is.

    I have then got a black / clear half thickness disk and bonded this to the top of my disk. Although it doesn't look very pretty, it serves its purpose.

    Now, i have ran the disk up 4 times so far, the disk remains whole, however the Xbox won't read the disk, i'm begining to think this probably won't ever work again, but i'm still thinking of ideas to attempt to get it to read again.

    I'm thinking of lacquring the data side of the disk to help 'blend' those cracks in, the data tracks must be very much in line, the disk seems fine in this respect, other than the fact you can see the cracks.

    However, the silver backing had somewhat lifted on the back, it no longer looks nice and smooth so to speak, i have seen this on damaged media in the past. I imagine this could also cause read issues.

    I'm unsure if the cracks would cause read issues, or rather the silver backing.

    Other than lacquring the data side of the disk, to help fill the minor crack lines, wet sand, buff back up, i'm running out of ideas what to try.

    Oh and randyranall, the disk wasn't in the Xbox during transit, i wish it was as it would have been safe :(

    The Game disk in question, is a special one, its an Xbox beta live! disk, this works in conjunction with the Beta Live! kit i have, the kit won't play any other retail games etc, only these beta live disks and this is the only one i had available.

    What can i say, gutted.
     
  10. hl718

    hl718 Site Soldier

    Joined:
    Nov 19, 2004
    Messages:
    2,856
    Likes Received:
    7
    1) The data is in the foil layer, not the plastic.

    2) If the foil layer is damaged, AT ALL, your data is lost. The only hope at that point is professional data recovery services and even then it is questionable.

    -hl718
     
  11. alphagamer

    alphagamer What is this? *BRRZZ*.. Ouch!

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2008
    Messages:
    3,255
    Likes Received:
    10
    Oh, I thought the polycarbonate was molded and then covered with aluminum. I stand corrected.
     
  12. randyrandall

    randyrandall Guest

    "However, the silver backing had somewhat lifted on the back, it no longer looks nice and smooth so to speak, i have seen this on damaged media in the past. I imagine this could also cause read issues."

    It's fucked, stick it in the bin. To echo hl718's sound post, the data is on the reflective part. The plastic is just a piece of flat plastic. If you scratch with a blade through that shiny layer, look through the bottom- you can see the data surface being scratched away leaving just transparent plastic.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 20, 2010
  13. sayin999

    sayin999 Officer at Arms

    Joined:
    Mar 13, 2004
    Messages:
    3,407
    Likes Received:
    113
    cd data is on the label itself. Dvd in the dead center. If that reflective layer in the center is broken in any way its a coaster for sure.
     
  14. mooseblaster

    mooseblaster Bleep. Site Supporter 2012, 2014

    Joined:
    Aug 27, 2006
    Messages:
    1,568
    Likes Received:
    4
    Noting how much 'advice' is being given out, I'm actually quite surprised no-one has asked this question.

    Dano: Is the disc a pressed disc (aka: a mass-produced, silver disc), or a CD-R (aka: a one-off disc, dyed on the bottom)? What it is may affect your luck.

    A pressed disc has the data pressed into the plastic (it is moulded). As such, the chances of being able to recover the data will be higher than a CD-R (although still rather unlikely).

    A CD-R has the data on the reflective surface, due to storing the data via the dye (when heated by a laser, the dye changes colour, thus allowing data storage). The chances of recovery, especially as you've mentioned that the whole reflective surface has 'rippled', is far lower.

    Either way, however, a simple botch job to recover the information on a pressed disc is unlikely to produce any positive results. This is due to the way the edges of the polycarbonate breaks and that there will be at least 2 bad bytes in every revolution of the disc. Such recovery will take several days, and is unlikely to be possible on a high-speed consumer drive with consumer software. The only viable solution is to take the disc to a qualified data recovery specialist, but you should be aware that due to the delicate and complicated nature of recovery it is likely to set you back over $1000 to recover.

    PS: Anyone who answered 'a pressed disc has the data pressed onto the metallic layer' without even having the common sense to check Wikipedia first obviously fails to an epic degree. :p
     
  15. alecjahn

    alecjahn Site Soldier

    Joined:
    Apr 23, 2008
    Messages:
    2,825
    Likes Received:
    9
    I thought I posted something about data being in the poly on professional discs... but maybe I decided everyone knew this and thus we were talking about a 'burned' disc.
     
  16. alphagamer

    alphagamer What is this? *BRRZZ*.. Ouch!

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2008
    Messages:
    3,255
    Likes Received:
    10
    This is why I thought we were talking pressed discs.
     
  17. APE

    APE Site Supporter 2015

    Joined:
    Dec 5, 2005
    Messages:
    6,416
    Likes Received:
    138
    If this is the Live beta disk that was issued with ReVolt and something else on it its replaceable and not really worth the trouble. An XBox dvd-rom is extremely picky about what it will read, particularly if it is a Thompson drive over a Samsung. Try a kreon drive in a PC as they're far less picky. I myself have a modded Samsung for XBox and 360 ripping purposes and seems to work with disks as long as they aren't scratched beyond recognition. Haven't seen a cracked disk to try yet though.
     
  18. smf

    smf mamedev

    Joined:
    Apr 14, 2005
    Messages:
    1,255
    Likes Received:
    88
    The data is pressed into the aluminium, then encased in plastic. I'm not convinced you'd be able to recover data from the plastic.

    Pressed CD's are more robust though. Cheap cd-r's especially have almost no protection on the top side. Writing on them with a (non cd) pen is enough to destroy them.
     
  19. mooseblaster

    mooseblaster Bleep. Site Supporter 2012, 2014

    Joined:
    Aug 27, 2006
    Messages:
    1,568
    Likes Received:
    4
    http://eil.com/explore/guide/cd_making.asp (CD distribution company)
    http://azuradisc.com/library.cfm?mode=howcd (CD mastering & repair company)
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZKD2aYLTWw#t=02m21s (clip from Discovery's How It's Made, showing the process)

    or even:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_Disc#Physical_details

    Metal mould presses out polycarbonate disc. Polycarbonate disc then coated with metal. It took me all of two minutes to gather 4 independent sources (including a Discovery clip) proving you incorrect. The only reason it took me that long is that several people quoted directly from Wikipedia. Honestly, we have the internet - if you're going to try and p0wn someone, at least have the sense to check that you're right first.

    Even common sense dictates that from a manufacturing standpoint, trying to coat a ultrathin sheet of pressed aluminium (in some cases, even slightly see-through) with plastic when you could simply press the data into plastic and coat it with aluminium to make it reflective seems absurd.
     
    Last edited: Apr 28, 2010
  20. randyrandall

    randyrandall Guest

    Either way, its cocked.
     
sonicdude10
Draft saved Draft deleted
Insert every image as a...
  1.  0%

Share This Page