Figuring Out The Best Price of Blank Media

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SUMMARY

The best price for blank media can be determined by calculating the cost per gigabyte (GB) for each option. The analysis reveals that the 30-pack of 25GB Blu Ray Discs costs approximately $0.04 per GB, making it the most economical choice. In contrast, the 50-pack of 8.5GB DVDR DL costs about $0.12 per GB, while the 100-pack of 4.7GB DVDR is priced at approximately $0.05 per GB. Therefore, for bulk storage needs, Blu Ray Discs offer the best value.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of cost-per-unit calculations
  • Familiarity with storage capacities of optical media
  • Basic knowledge of Blu Ray and DVD formats
  • Awareness of market pricing trends for blank media
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This discussion is beneficial for consumers, data backup specialists, and anyone involved in purchasing optical media for storage solutions, particularly those looking to optimize their spending on blank discs.

Embison
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Which is the best deal out of these options and how do you figure it out mathematically? Do you calculate it down to the megabyte...gigabyte or per disc? I am not sure how to do it correctly.

The 3 options are...

30 pack of 25GB Blu Ray Discs for 29.99

50 pack of 8.5GB DVDR DL for 51.99

100 pack of 4.7GB DVDR for 25.49


Please let me know how to figure it out...thank you for any help!
 
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Embison said:
Which is the best deal out of these options and how do you figure it out mathematically? Do you calculate it down to the megabyte...gigabyte or per disc? I am not sure how to do it correctly.

The 3 options are...

30 pack of 25GB Blu Ray Discs for 29.99

50 pack of 8.5GB DVDR DL for 51.99

100 pack of 4.7GB DVDR for 25.49


Please let me know how to figure it out...thank you for any help!

Choose one and go for it? Total capacity, perhaps? Or the equipment you have available? Size of files?
 
You can work out the cost per GB of storage for each of the three options. For the Blu Ray discs, there are 30 discs at 25 GB each, making 30 * 25 = 750 GB in all. Divide the cost (29.99) by the amount of storage (750 GB) to get the cost per GB.
 
Embison said:
Which is the best deal out of these options and how do you figure it out mathematically? Do you calculate it down to the megabyte...gigabyte or per disc? I am not sure how to do it correctly.

The 3 options are...

30 pack of 25GB Blu Ray Discs for 29.99

50 pack of 8.5GB DVDR DL for 51.99

100 pack of 4.7GB DVDR for 25.49


Please let me know how to figure it out...thank you for any help!

Another factor is the intended usage. For example, backing-up my Quicken data, which is only a few megabytes, is more economical on CD-R. Likewise with archiving my digital photos. One year of photos easily fits on a single-layer DVD.
 
pantaz said:
Another factor is the intended usage. For example, backing-up my Quicken data, which is only a few megabytes, is more economical on CD-R. Likewise with archiving my digital photos. One year of photos easily fits on a single-layer DVD.

CDR's these days are considerably more expensive than DVDR's for some crazy reason.

http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Produc...600010573&IsNodeId=1&name=100 Pack - 600 Pack



Thanx Mark44...

The best deal is the Blu Ray discs at about 4 cents per GB. The DVDR's are about 5 cents per GB. And the Dual Layer DVD's are about 12 cents per GB. What a scam LoL. You would think that Dual Layer DVD's would be far less expensive than Blu Ray discs.
 
This is how inflated CDR prices are these days...

For CDR's to be the same price as the DVDR's I mentioned (100 DVDR's for 25.49) The equivalent of that is 3.50 for a 100 pack of CDR's which obviously won't ever happen. The price for 100 CDR's is miles away from 3.50.
 
Embison said:
And the Dual Layer DVD's are about 12 cents per GB. What a scam LoL.
I can remember buying RAM for an Apple IIe computer some years back - I paid about $100 for 128KB. That means I was paying about $800/MB, or the equivalent of $80,000/GB.

So $.12 per GB doesn't seem quite so much of a scam...
 
Mark44 said:
So $.12 per GB doesn't seem quite so much of a scam...


Does it make sense to compare the prices of things from today to the prices of things back in the day? No... I had to pay insane prices for things back then as well which if I compare it to how inexpensive the same things are these days it isn't even remotely close. Just like your example.

I'm comparing the prices of equivalent items in the exact same time period. So yes paying triple the amount per GB is completely foolish.
 
Embison said:
Does it make sense to compare the prices of things from today to the prices of things back in the day? No... I had to pay insane prices for things back then as well which if I compare it to how inexpensive the same things are these days it isn't even remotely close. Just like your example.

I remember buying my first computer the same year I bought a new car. I paid about as much for the computer as I did for the car!

I'm comparing the prices of equivalent items in the exact same time period. So yes paying triple the amount per GB is completely foolish.
 
  • #10
Embison said:
Does it make sense to compare the prices of things from today to the prices of things back in the day? No... I had to pay insane prices for things back then as well which if I compare it to how inexpensive the same things are these days it isn't even remotely close. Just like your example.

I'm comparing the prices of equivalent items in the exact same time period. So yes paying triple the amount per GB is completely foolish.
Not necessarily, since there might be other factors at play, such as the lifespan of the media, the quality of the media, and so on. If the only criterion is the cost per GB, then, yes, I would go for the cheaper product, but there might be other criteria that should be considered as well.
 

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