Every writable disc has at least four layers: • Disc substrate – the bulk of the disc is 1.2 mm thick, and is usually injection molded from
polycarbonate plastic. • Recording layer – a thin coating of dye on recordable discs, or a sandwich of metals for rewriteable discs. • Reflective layer – a thin layer of silver, a silver alloy, or gold. • Protective coating – a clear lacquer which is spin-coated over the top of the disc and cured with
ultraviolet light. The polycarbonate layer has a spiral pre-groove that is formed when the disc substrate is injection molded against a stamper. The read/write laser in the drive will follow this pre-groove track as it is writing, in order to maintain the spacing between the written tracks with a high degree of accuracy. The groove on the surface of a CD-R disc is not a perfect spiral and contains slight
sinusoidal deviations called
wobble.
Frequency modulation is used to encode data into the wobble with a
carrier frequency of 22.05 kHz. The drive will synchronize its rotation speed to the reference speed of the wobble signal, allowing it to maintain an accurate
linear velocity (the speed of the track as it passes the laser). This wobble is further modulated with a timecode reference signal allowing the drive to approximately locate specific blocks of data on the disc. This modulated signal is known as ATIP. == See also ==