To the laymen, replication and duplication probably mean the same. But to the people in the disc manufacturing industry, there is a subtle difference. Replication usually refers to the process of making CD or DVD from a glass stamper (or mold). When melted polycarbonate is injected under high pressure onto the glass stamper, the bits of information are formed. A reflective layers is then coated on the disc so the laser beam inside the CD player or DVD player can see the data.
To the laymen, replication and duplication probably mean the same. But to the people in the disc manufacturing industry, there is a subtle difference. Replication usually refers to the process of making CD or DVD from a glass stamper (or mold). When melted polycarbonate is injected under high pressure onto the glass stamper, the bits of information are formed. A reflective layers is then coated on the disc so the laser beam inside the CD player or DVD player can see the data. Duplication, on the other hand, refers to making CD or DVD by burning data onto recordable media. For that reason duplication is usually limited to short-run smaller or urgent jobs. For large volume production, replication is the most cost effective and the discs produced are of higher quality. Replication can only be done under highly temperature and dust controlled environment. Duplication can be done in any normal environment such as in the office or at home. A replicated CD or DVD (so called pressed CD or DVD
Duplication refers to the process of taking an existing blank CD-R or DVD-R disc and burning information onto that disc much the same way you copy CDs on your computer. The towers that are used for our duplication projects perform an evaluation of your master disc to check for read and write errors and then make an exact duplicate. This is the best option if you have small quantities or need a quicker turnaround time to meet a deadline. Typical production time for duplication is two business days. Replication refers to the manufacturing process that starts with raw material to manufacture your discs from scratch. Your original disc is evaluated for read and write errors, followed by the production of a glass master of your disc. This glass master is then used to create a stamper, which is mounted on the machine that uses heat and pressure to mold your discs one at a time. This is the highest quality of disc manufacturing, but is only cost effective for 1000 discs or more. This is the b
Replication is the process of stamping CD/DVDs from raw material whereas duplication is the burning of CD/DVDs from CD-R or DVD-R media. Replication is the equivalent to what you would find off the shelf of retail stores. We recommend replication for software and contents that requires stringent data integrity such as software, movies with menus, and discs designed to autoplay.