DIY or Outsource DVD Duplication
When it comes to CD or DVD duplication, the moneyed doesn’t need to think much; it’s us, to whom every penny counts, land up in a dilemma. Firstly, it’s the cost that often outruns our budget; secondly, we stay a bit scared regarding the quality and lastly, we think about whether the additional services shall cost extra.
The fear increases tenfold when it comes to more sophisticated storage mediums – say - HD DVD or Blu ray duplication. For most of the time, the service buyer is given a quote that includes the price for the actual number of blank discs to be copied; if a disc is spoilt in he process, the costs rise accordingly. All these factors made a lot of people think about getting professional quality DVD duplicators for themselves. It’s also a huge investment that often lies blocked. But what gets overlooked is – what proves good for a small quantity often turns out to be a trouble for the greater and vice-versa. The rest is understood.
Process Consideration
Manual or automated? This is a question that troubles most of us when it comes to get our loads of CD or DVD burnt; the recent times offered us a wide range of CD and DVD Duplicators that can burn hundreds at once. But unless you are running a professional CD and DVD duplication setup, investing after such equipment is a loss, even if you have to burn a few CDs or DVDs everyday. If you are reluctant to avail service from any of the DVD duplication set-ups, the burner that came with your personal computer shall prove enough. But anything higher than twenty-a-day is a call to arms. Also, you need to consider the packaging and printing; if you just want the data to be written, then burning them yourself is a better option; if it’s for a professional presentation, then there is no other way out.
Procedure for DVD duplication costs
With a standalone tower system (which are also the most popular among DVD and CD duplication hardware) integrating a number of recorders, costs of burning multiple copies are bound to come down; even if the printing costs stay attached, the DVD or CD duplication business can manufacture a large number of copies at a nominal price charged per unit. With seven- or eight-recorder configurations, the productivity rises with a decline in the cost. But chaining technology (one of the most recent improvements) guarantees a larger saving; it involves for DVD or CD duplication by running massive, parallel systems that burn a few hundreds of CD-s/DVD-s simultaneously, handled by automated pick-n-place robots or a similar disc-handling system. Since these systems support multiple disc images and audio read-back verification and also allow importing of both digital and analog audio, costs regarding making use of an expensive host-base system are just a tale of yore.
Advantages & Disadvantages
- Customized direct-disc, professional quality printing.
- A guarantee against money loss; if a media turns out bad, it’s the responsibility of the person who agreed to do the mass-duplication to replace the same.
- No blockage of money regarding CD duplication systems and no maintenance cost involved.
- No need to appoint a person to handle the job.
- If DVD or CD duplication equipment fails, the only solution remains is to outsource the job. That’s hyping the investments up plus a lot of repair-related tensions as well as costs. That also makes a person lose on the deadlines.
- In case the quality turns out bad, you need to re-invest the amount to make your client happy whereas if you had outsourced, your profit margins would have been your desired one.
- Post-duplication works (printing, assembly, insertion, and shrink-wrapping) require special equipment; it’s a bad investment to go for them unless steady revenue can be earned through them.
Friday, May 23, 2008
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