ms <ms@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in news:6cl5ogF3g78caU1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> The used movie dvd looked IMO clean, no scratches, very clean, even
> viewed at a angle, could see nothing.
>
> I played it and got, I believe, an unusual problem.
>
> A scene in a lighted room, the lighting is bright as you would expect,
> but a moment later, the lighting dims, then brightens again. This
> repeated at random intervals during the viewing. The movie was "The Man
> in the Grey Flannel Suit", and that was not in the movie.
>
> I replaced it with another movie dvd, it played fine.
>
> I washed the problem dvd in plain water, let it air dry. Now it has
> water spots. Haven't tried to play it again.
>
> What is a safe way to clean a movie dvd at home?
>
> And, is a dirty dvd the problem in the above results?
>
> ms
A 'used' movie DVD? Could it be a bootleg DVD?
Some protection schemes cause brightness variations.
For example, if you play a DVD back and try to record it on a VCR or play
through a VCR, you will see the brightness cycling from dark to viewable.
As for cleaning the DVD, wa****ng it with clean, deionized water and
letting it air dry should work. NO scrubbing!!!!! 'Scrubbing' can drag
abrasive particles across the optical surface of the disk and scratch the
surface. Window cleaner and lens cleaning tissue, properly used (one pass
only, no pressure) over the surface can work also.
--
bz 73 de N5BZ k
please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an
infinite set.
bz+ser@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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