 
For CD, DVD, SACD, Laserdisc & Games

Auric Illuminator improves the audible and visible playback quality
of all optical discs. Developed as an advanced optical resolution
enhancement, Auric Illuminator is incredibly effective.
Auric Illuminator will help your disc player retrieve all the
available data on your discs at the right time. Auric Illuminator
allows the laser pickup to track the disc more accurately. It
also improves discrimination of the exact beginning and end of
the reflective and non-reflective areas on the track. You haven't
really experienced the true potential of digital formats until
you see and hear the results of one treatment on a CD, DVD, Laserdisc
or SACD. The subjective experience is greatly enhanced by Auric
Illuminator.
The application of Auric Illuminator is an easy,
two-step process. The application
is semi-permanent.
It should not have to be treated again unless the disc is cleaned
with water surfactant or isopropyl alcohol.
The first step reduces ambient light and
infrared light in the disc material. The Auric Illuminator light
absorbing pen is used to blacken the inside and outside edges
of the CD. (The outside rim and the inside of the center hole).
This improves the signal to noise ratio of the reflected signal
allowing for more accurate timing of the retrieved data.
The second step involves the application
of Auric Illuminator gel. This unique product improves the optics
by allowing laser light to enter and leave the disc with less
reflection or scattering. This allows the pickup to "see"
a stronger, more sharply defined signal resulting in fewer data
retrieval errors.
Auric Illuminator gel also lowers the disc surface electrical
charge. The surface of an untreated disc will build up a static
charge while spinning against the air. The static charge builds
up until the voltage becomes quite high and then discharges into
the air or surrounding surfaces. The charge/discharge cycle causes
the disc to microscopically tilt or wobble. A wobbling disc
is much more difficult to track accurately causing audible timing
errors or even lost data. Although redundant codes can replace
most of the missing data, the disruption of timing accuracy causes
these errors to become audible. Buffering or re-clocking the data
cannot totally correct timing errors or jitter. A vibrating disc
is difficult to track accurately. This causes the pickup's servomotors
to work much harder at maintaining focus. When the servomotors
are constantly correcting the laser's position the power supply
is pulsed more frequently. This causes excessive power supply
fluctuations which affect the analog audio/video power supplies,
degrading the overall system performance. By not allowing excessive
static charge to build up, discs spin with less wobble making
them easier to track. auric illuminator allows music to be more
natural sounding and pictures to be reproduced more accurately.
Auric Illuminator is so effective at controlling optical disc
jitter problems that it is considered more of a necessity than
a tweak by most people who try it. Even buffers of expensive digital
players are not perfect; therefore resolution
improvement still results by using Auric Illuminator on the very
best digital format players. After experiencing the huge
improvement in resolution that this product provides it is hard
to listen to music on optical formats again without its use.
One Auric Illuminator kit will treat over 200 discs; at $39.95
there is nothing on the planet that provides so much musical
enhancement for so little cost.
SUMMARY:
1) Improves the optical signal to noise
ratio by reducing ambient light in the disc material. This minimizes
ambiguous signal transition points (reflect/non-reflect junctions).
2) Improves optical transparency by reducing
reflection and refraction.
3) Removes stored energy from the disc
surface and prevents future static build up. This eliminates charge
induced wobble making the disc easier to track.
Reveal the Full Potential of Optical Discs -- $49.95
Enhances 200-400 disks
HELPFUL ARTICLES:
There is more to it than mere data retrieval. -- Jon Risch,
AudioAsylum
Read Article
How a CD works -- Marshall Brain, HowStuffWorks
Read Article
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