CDs And Green Markers. Please Don’t Laugh.


I’m sorry. I apologize. If anything has been done to death, it’s this. And yet . . . 

I was pulling “Darkness On The Edge Of Town” out of my CD player the other day and wondering if Bruce had really made peace with his father when I noticed the edge of the disc was green. Looking through my collection, I found a bunch of them so marked. “Let It Be” by The Replacements. “Murmur.” Stuff that came out during the brief period after the introduction of the CD and before the green pen became an embarrassment. 

I should give a quick kudos to the albums that have survived countless culling that keeps my active collection at about 500 discs. Discs that are easily stored because I always take the discs and printed media out of the ridiculous plastic “jewel” cases and put them in DiscSox, an invention I can’t believe has been overlooked by the Nobel committee. 500 discs fits into five trays from Office Depot and the whole collection takes up about 16x30 inches and the height of a CD. I can’t imagine living with the original packaging. 

I never A/B’ed any of the albums with the green marking. Never looked into the science of the green pen. Back in the day, it was cheap, it was easy, and it was supposed to work. Why not try it? When it became a laughingstock, I stopped. 

But like skinny ties, I assume that green markers have come in and out of vogue many times since 1982. I love a good tweak and wonder if anyone has justified the use of the green marker. I’m not looking far a scientific explanation. Herbie’s Super Black Hole actually works but without anything close to a reason for doing so. I’d be thrilled if the same was true if green pens. 

Besides, those looking for science in audio forums should familiarize themselves with a priori reasoning, and the problems attendant upon it. 

Where have I gone? Why so much wandering? Is it because the initial question is so stupid? Still, I’d like to know: Has anything happened since, say, 1985, that would make greening the edge of CDs sensible?

If not, I promise to apologize and slink quietly back into the darkness.

paul6001

Dill, I’m sorry but I don’t understand your post. “Not to those who never tried it.” Because those people don’t understand the beauty of green edged CDs? They don’t know the aural beauty that could be theirs? They haven’t seen the double blind, peer reviewed study from MIT that gushed over the power of the green marker?”
 

Is that what you were trying to say?

As you know, tweaks like these are fodder for the ones that already know that it "can't work" without ever trying them. My response was a bit of a dig on them.

 

"Never looked into the science of the green pen."

 

There isn't anything to look into. No science whatsoever. 

Well the Krell cd20i I have bathes the cd in green led light on both sides of the tray. But I guess that and the massive power supplies etc don't do any good to anyone who thinks they have the best cd player ever made because it was ten dollars full price at Walmart.  Many may sayers think that a forty dollar DAC is much better than the twenty year old multi bit DACs  quite frankly I have never heard a new DAC or new streamer that can come anywhere close to one of my older truely reference quality cd player from 29 or more years ago. In my opinion half of the best cd player I have ever heard have the ultra analog DAC in themthe Linn CD 12 is top notch as well as the dcs pair and the sonic frontier dac and transport three. The krell20cdi and the Wadia seperates are both special as well as the levinson top pair and the Oracle transport as well as the meridian transport from those day are pure and simple a cut the at above the current junk they are selling.