Audio CDs have 2-3 layers of error correction/concealment that make them resistant to scratches. The data is interleaved so it can be reconstructed should there be a minor scratch
One of the reasons encode some low quality audio sources at 128kbs when 64kbs would be sufficient is based upon suspicion that if I archived a higher bit rate mp3 file onto a data disk... the bigger file might be more resistant to scratches than a more compressed one.
But I'm not sure if there IS any error correction on a mp3 disk as there is a standard CD.
Does anyone know?
Thanks!
One of the reasons encode some low quality audio sources at 128kbs when 64kbs would be sufficient is based upon suspicion that if I archived a higher bit rate mp3 file onto a data disk... the bigger file might be more resistant to scratches than a more compressed one.
But I'm not sure if there IS any error correction on a mp3 disk as there is a standard CD.
Does anyone know?
Thanks!
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