Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (
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In article <20040509160302.19095.00000814@mb-m21.aol.com>,
kamcgann@aol.com (KAMCGANN) writes:
>>I don't understand how a company can release such a poor looking disc while
> another company, their competition, releases a crisp looking disc.>
>
> It simply didn't matter. LDers demonstrated that they would blindly
> accept anything released on their beloved format.....and that is what they got.
> LDers lovingly endured years of P&S, rot/speckling, crosstalk, poor bang for
> the buck, "white dots," chroma noise, etc. and would still be willing to
> purchase far inferior LDs today for twice the price of state of the art DVDs.
> There was no limit to the compromise LDers were willing to accept for their
> underachieving clunky format. Thankfully, consumers and non format obsessed A/V
> enthusiasts alike have made DVD, the true high performance standard definition
> format, the format of choice worldwide and have relegated the obsolete LD
> format to the obscurity it so richly deserves.
>
Before reading further, please recognize that I am 100% a DVD supporter,
and only have LDs for copying onto newer formats and for legacy purposes!!!
But, I have seen LDs have such variable quality that seems to be
related BOTH to the quality of the LD itself and also the mastering.
For example, my GWTW LD is very damned good (as good as one might
expect from composite video.) Its video noise is well below irritating.
On the other hand, I have some DVDs that were obviously mastered from
inferior sources (perhaps 3/4" masters.) They look 'mediocre.'
In one case, I have a DVD and a LD of the same material, and the
LD and DVD were almost indistingushable (because of being sourced
from the essentially same tape.) When CAREFULLY comparing the two,
I might give the DVD a very slight thumbs-up, but mastering is
very important. On the scale of LD quality, the LD material wasn't
100%, and the DVD didn't look significantly different.
On the VERY VERY best day, a good LD could look damned good for the
timeframe that they were common. I have some stuff (music videos)
that I'll probably never be able to buy on DVD (mastered directly from
a 2nd generation master tape or somesuch.) I lament not having a good
quality DVD of the out-of-date material.
So, LD still has value when the material has no other place to be. However,
I agree that well mastered DVD is the way to go.
John