A very rare occurence! CD-Rom explodes!!

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Gary D
    Lord of Digital Video
    Lord of Digital Video
    • Dec 2005
    • 2266

    A very rare occurence! CD-Rom explodes!!

    Drive: LITE-ON DVDRW LH-20A1P KL0G (ATA)

    Today, while I was at work, a CD-ROM exploded in my DVD drive. My son (age 4) said he was playing the game and it just explode. I thought at first it was an insertion error (half in/ half out) and broke when he closed it. But if this happened, the pieces would have been much larger and quite a fewer.

    But the largest piece inside the unit was less than a dime (1 cm) in size. Many were just tiny little pieces of plastic with points on them like knifes. After putting the unit back together, it appears that there is no damage to it.

    I know this is rare but the CD-ROM was well used! There could have been cracks in it but I am not sure. It was my son's favourite. Thank god I have a copy of it.

    So please inspect your kid's CD-ROMs for cracks around the hubs. It may prevent a lot of work from having to remove your drive and taking it apart.
    Gary D
  • Chewy
    Super Moderator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18971

    #2
    There could have been cracks in it but I am not sure
    take that and deposit it in the bank

    good luck, it hosed the premium plex I had

    not that rare

    Comment

    • soup
      Just Trying To Help
      • Nov 2005
      • 7524

      #3
      It was lucky that it happened in an enclosed space otherwise that could have been a lot worse. Glad to hear that everybody involved is okay.

      Comment

      • jm1647
        An Eagles Fan, A MenuShrinker
        • Apr 2005
        • 3661

        #4
        Both the CD and DVD drive speeds have increased mucho times from where they started out at.

        Like you said Gary keep an eye on the conditions of media

        Comment

        • Chewy
          Super Moderator
          • Nov 2003
          • 18971

          #5
          do not walk on cd's or dvd's

          Comment

          • Gary D
            Lord of Digital Video
            Lord of Digital Video
            • Dec 2005
            • 2266

            #6
            Tell that to a 4 and 3 year old.

            Lots of luck!
            Gary D

            Comment

            • Chewy
              Super Moderator
              • Nov 2003
              • 18971

              #7
              maybe you need to apply some heavy duty industrial labels

              Comment

              • Gary D
                Lord of Digital Video
                Lord of Digital Video
                • Dec 2005
                • 2266

                #8


                Gary D

                Comment

                • codajohn
                  Digital Video Expert
                  Digital Video Expert
                  • Jul 2005
                  • 661

                  #9
                  The guys on the TV show Mythbusters did an episode on how many rpm it would take to explode a CD.
                  CJ
                  My DVD Collection
                  Register To Join Digital Video Forums


                  Dell Inspiron 9100 Laptop, Windows XP Home SP 2 (build 2600), 2.80GH Pent 4, ST94811A 40GB HD, 2GB RAM, NEC DVD+RW ND-6100A 104D, ATI MOBILITY RADEON 9700, External 250GB Maxtor HD, External LG-5163D A105

                  IBM ThinkCenter 8189, XP Pro, 3.2GH Pentium 4, 120 GB HD, 1GB Ram, BENQ DW1650 BCIC, Nvidia GeForce FX 5200, Generic floppy disk drive (3.5")

                  The Golden Rules of Burning

                  Comment

                  • locoeng
                    Who Farted?
                    • Dec 2005
                    • 2509

                    #10
                    http://www.gadgetopia.com/post/2086



                    Mythbusters on the Discovery Channel recently tackled the legend of exploding CDs. The legend goes that flawed CDs that are spun to 30,000+ r.p.m. in 50+X CD-ROM drives have a tendency to explode.

                    Well, turns out that the legend is somewhat true. The guys from Mythbusters were able to get some CDs to explode by spinning them really, really fast on a fake CD-ROM drive powered by a router (the wood-working kind).

                    (Why a router? Turns out that they couldn’t get a commercial CD-ROM drive to spin as fast as it was supposed to. A 52X drive is supposed to spin at 30K r.p.m., but they couldn’t get one to spin past 20K.)

                    They spun these CDs (and exploded many of them) in front of an unprotected gelatin mold of a human. The damage was exceptional. The exploding CDs spun outward like ninja stars, doing considerable damage to the dummy. The best results were from CDs that they “pre-damaged” to simulate wear-and-tear, including one they microwaved.

                    (Remember, however, that in real-life the CD is inside the CD-ROM drive, giving you more protection than Jello-man. Although, in one expirement, the exploding CD dented and deformed the metal case, leaving creases in it.)

                    The most fun was when they plugged their fake CD-ROM drive-router concoction into a 220-volt outlet. They’d plug it in, and the CD would last perhaps a half a second before vaporizing in a cloud of shiny fragments.

                    They had a high-speed camera running during the experiments, and in super slo-mo playback, you’d often see the CD start to wobble just before detonation. It appeared that at a certain speed, the harmonics would getting the thing rattling in the drive (moving up and down, as well as round and round), and even flexing considerably. Some of them looked like pizza dough being tossed on the air. The end came very quickly after.

                    Now, Mythbusters are not alone in this solemn pursuit of science. This guy did something even more fun by spinning a CD up on a Dremel.

                    …a quick jerk at the tool and the CD slid out of the holder and contacted the carpet whilst spinning at ungodly speeds. It peeled out a bit in front of me and proceeded to make its way to the door at a very high speed. On contacting the closed door, the CD did a most unexpected thing: it first bounced back a few inches, and then, when it hit the door again, it jumped straight up the door and struck the ceiling, exploding into thousands of fragments which rained down on the entire room.

                    He has videos of a lot of his expirements, and they’re entertaining as all get out. Ah, good fun in the name of science.


                    "I refuse to have a battle of wits with an unarmed person. It's not fair to you and no challenge for us."
                    Walt Kelly

                    Comment

                    • Chewy
                      Super Moderator
                      • Nov 2003
                      • 18971

                      #11
                      just put a good 1 or 2 inch crack in it first

                      Comment

                      Working...