I used to think 100% reliable - what I put on the disc, I got back off byte for byte. But lately that confidence has been damaged.
I was burning a CD-RW with a large (637MB) linux image for a Mandrake install with MakeCD, but mandrake was failing to install, complaining that the image on the CD failed a checksum. I checked it manually, and sure enough, it did. So I reburnt it.
I've burned this same image on several different CD-RW of different brands on at least two different drives, and always the file fails its checksum. Doing a direct compare to the file I still have on HD, often more than 310,000 bytes are wrong - about 0.06% of the full image. There are single byte errors and even whole areas of the file filled with 0 or by repeating bytes like 0x59595959...
It's not the drive or the computer or MakeCD, because I get the same problem on my family PC's burner. The original file I downloaded is fine and unpacks. If it's the discs then I have two bad brands with a full load of defectives. Whatever I do I can't get this file to write properly on a CD-RW.
Does anyone else get this? 0.06% might fall within some kind of quality control, but i need 0.0% error. Are CD-RW discs really so unreliable?