I read the article Dolemite referred to. Very informative reading, thanks! But it seemed to me that the point of the article was that recording at higher speeds does not degrade the quality, at least not significantly. In some cases, slower speeds were actually worse. But the differences are so small as to be insignificant.
I wish he had tested some cheap no-name brands of CD-Rs to see what the error rates were. Also, I'd like to see some tests with a less expensive brand of CD recorder. I'd like to get some idea of what my error rates might be.
Anyway, there were two things that were not clear to me from the article:
1.) Do audio CD players employ CIRC correction like CD-ROMs or do they only use blanking and interpolation? I assume that they do use CIRC since he says "CDs use, at their base level of error correction, CIRC,…". Then I assume that if errors cannot be corrected at the C2 stage that blanking or interpolation are used.
2.) Does the audio CD format specify the type of correction to be employed (that is, less correction) or is it simply that audio CD players happen to use less correction? Is there anything to prevent a good quality audio CD reader from using just as much error correction on audio as a CD-ROM would use on data?
Jim