In the shadowy corners of high-end car audio forums and among serious Compact Disc (CD) collectors, a specific piece of plastic commands almost mythical reverence. It is not a rare Beatles pressing or a gold-plated audiophile SACD. It is a teal-and-white disc, officially designated as part number .
In the 1980s, as Sony and Philips were establishing the Compact Disc standard, engineers needed a "perfect" reference point to calibrate the most expensive CD players in production. Most test discs were utilitarian, containing simple sine waves or digital silence.
If you are running a modern Pioneer or Alpine system: The YEDS-18 is useless to you.
Sony’s high-end ES players use a precise laser diode. The YEDS-18 was pressed with a specific aluminum reflectivity (± 2%) that mirrors the exact density of a commercial CD. Burned CDs (CD-R) use organic dye with variable reflectivity (often 15-20% lower). When you insert a burned copy, the Sony servo mechanism misreads the "Focus Error" signals, rendering the calibration useless.
If you are the proud (or stubborn) owner of a or XDP-4000X with a finicky KSS-340A laser: Yes. It is the only way.
In the shadowy corners of high-end car audio forums and among serious Compact Disc (CD) collectors, a specific piece of plastic commands almost mythical reverence. It is not a rare Beatles pressing or a gold-plated audiophile SACD. It is a teal-and-white disc, officially designated as part number .
In the 1980s, as Sony and Philips were establishing the Compact Disc standard, engineers needed a "perfect" reference point to calibrate the most expensive CD players in production. Most test discs were utilitarian, containing simple sine waves or digital silence.
If you are running a modern Pioneer or Alpine system: The YEDS-18 is useless to you.
Sony’s high-end ES players use a precise laser diode. The YEDS-18 was pressed with a specific aluminum reflectivity (± 2%) that mirrors the exact density of a commercial CD. Burned CDs (CD-R) use organic dye with variable reflectivity (often 15-20% lower). When you insert a burned copy, the Sony servo mechanism misreads the "Focus Error" signals, rendering the calibration useless.
If you are the proud (or stubborn) owner of a or XDP-4000X with a finicky KSS-340A laser: Yes. It is the only way.