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News:
We began offering an extended guarantee for the premium disks, 90 days instead of the former 30 days. Also,
you may specify archive gold disks if you like, for a surcharge of $3 per disk. See media.
New visitors: You have found us! (How did you find us?) This hidden dvdr collection is made available to our Shoujo Anime Club. But since you are here, you can order disks too without being a member. Read all the information below. Please feel free to ask questions or to report anything which doesn't seem to work as you expect.
Below, find information on
charges & costs,
media,
shipping information,
payment methods,
how to contact us,
a semi-guarantee, and
trades.
| Also, here are general notes on our turnaround time, our video grading method, special services for foreign members, what we're recording now, selecting a DVD Player, and the playing time of disks. |
| MINI-FAQ | ||||||||||
Will
these disks play in European DVD players? Yes. The first thing we did
was to ask a friend in England to go to a TV-Stereo store and put a disk into a
typical British DVD player, and it worked fine. These have no region encoding. We send disks
to Germany, France, Italy, Australia, Russia, and other places too.
| How
do I pay if outside the USA? Most use the international service of Paypal.com.
Others send cash or US dollar money orders.
| How
much will it cost? Figure it yourself using the section on charges, below. Or fill out the form per the instructions, including your complete mailing address,
you will get the exact total. Don't
ask me to send you a personalized quote.
| Where
are the lists? Right here: Anime,
Drama,
Music,
Sumo,
and Other.
| What's
the status of my request? See the Request status page.
| I made an order
two days ago, but got no reply email. See the email problems page.
| How long
will it take to get my disks? Read the info on turnaround time.
| I heard that labels on DVDR's can unbalance them and cause read errors.
Not true. See my page Barbara's Explanation of the DVD Label Issue.
| Can
I order from two lists at once? Of course. Your order will be combined into one.
| Is that disk
subtitled in English?
The rule here is: Everything is subtitled in English unless otherwise specified in the description.
| Actually
I'm looking for this other anime which you don't have on your list - do you have it?
Don't bother asking for things not listed. If I do have them, I'm not making them available.
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![]() | Disk Types Available
| ![]() ![]() ![]() Incremental cost per disk, approximate, | including disk label and labeled case, postage & handling extra ![]() Type | ![]() Guarantee | ![]() Record speed used | ![]() Typical surface scan score (DVDinfo.exe, perfect=99) | ![]() Extra services, each disk | ![]() Alternate type if primary type not available | ![]() Ordering method | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
We package each disk is in an individual slimline case,
with a nice label on the
spine and on the disk itself. The top shell of all cases is transparent; the bottom
case shell is colored, with premium (silver) disks in amber or red bottoms, and
standard disks in white or clear bottoms. (Gold premium disks are in cases
with black bottoms.) The cases line up on a shelf nicely,
with the titles easily readable, and take up very little space. We
print the labels using a color printer, then apply the labels by hand. The
disks do not have a large edge-to-edge label, but instead have a small 1.5
inch round label on the top face of the disk. (Don't try to remove
the label -- you might damage the disk. If you insist on trying to remove
the label anyway, apply alcohol to the label and allow it to soften, then
peel it off. Never use a sharp tool.) Also note: the
labels are printed with a water-soluble ink so avoid splashing water on
them!
See photo. Disks with removed labels
are not returnable. A Usenet FAQ on DVD's incorrectly states that labels can "unbalance" a
disk and cause read errors - this is absolutely untrue, at least for the types of labels used here.
DVD Players:
In my opinion,
the DVD players which have the best optical systems are the Pioneer models.
We have never seen a compatibility problem between a Pioneer DVD player and
one of our generic disks.
They only cost a bit more than the Chinese/Singapore units, and are well worth it.
However, the quality of the South Asian units is rapidly increasing.
As a viewer of CJK video you may also want (1) region-free
operation so you can play Region 2 DVD's, and (2) Macrovision-free operation
so that the output of the DVD player doesn't wipe out the picture in your
VCR when playing commercial DVD's. The last is important if you want
to ever record a commercial DVD to tape (you can't, if the disk has Macrovision,
and all major US DVD releases do have Macrovision). You can get a Pioneer 333, an
older but extremely fine model, for $120-150 on the Internet. For just $230 you can buy
a Pioneer DV-343, a very fine DVD player, with added modifications to allow
region-free playback and macrovision-free playback. This is an example of one of the
slightly-modified units for sale at World-Import.Com.
(Be sure you understand
that their units are modified. Buying the same model at a lower price from "buy.com" will
not give you region-free, macrovision-free operation.) This is
where I got my unit, the region-free/macrovision-free Pioneer DV-333, and it
is a terrific unit. I send all my friends to this web site and they have all
been very happy. I am not affiliated in any way with them and they don't
know I'm sending people to them - this is a pure recommendation on my part. If you
really do want a SE Asian unit, then at least get one which has some interesting features.
Here is a link to a remarkable
little unit which can play virtually anything you can put into it (even jpeg images from your
camera transferred to disk) for only about $55, plus it has karaoke. Amazing. And it is "region free" too.
However, caveat emptor. I bought two of these, one for me and one for my daughter. My daughter's failed
after about 6 weeks. Mine is still working, but it produces a "pixellated" image sometimes
playing disks that my Pioneer dvd player can play perfectly. Many of these Chinese/Singapore/Indonesia DVD players
are made from parts lots rejected by major manufacturers and then put on the market by parts
brokers at extremely low prices, and anything made from low quality parts will not be high quality.
Charges:
|
After submitting your request, you will receive an email showing the total
amount due. Standard DVDR's are approximately $5.45 each, and premium
ones are about $8.20. Your total will also include postage, handling,
and packaging, plus Paypal fees if applicable. Handling/packaging
charges are fixed at $1 per USA package or $2 per non-USA package.
Paypal's fees (if you pay using Paypal) are 2.9% (3.9% foreign) plus $0.30.
All these charges will be figured and totalled in the email confirmation
which you receive.
When you filled out the form, you specified
a payment method: money order, cash by mail, Paypal, etc. Paypal is the
favorite payment method, especially for people outside the USA since
Paypal takes payments in foreign currency. A table showing typical
charges for orders of 1, 3, or 11 disks is on the right. (You can order any number or
combination of disks, the table is only an example.) As you can see from the
table, you can save money by
avoiding making single disk requests. There are fixed charges per package, so
it is more efficient to get several disks at once in a single package instead
of getting them one at a time. (Note for European members: because
of the way postage is figured and the average weight of each disk, it is
somewhat more efficient to make sure your request is an ODD number of disks.)
Your total will be rounded up or down
to the nearest dollar, so your final total could differ from the
table by 1 dollar plus or minus. One more thing: as you can see,
our per-disk charges are
low. In fact, I did a survey of 12 other distributors
who had DVDR's, and all but 1 of them charged more, so our charges are
nearly the lowest. We've recorded a lot, using up quite
a lot of expensive disks (our masters are on premium disks)
and we're not making any profits overall. Many of
the disks on the list have not been requested even one time. Our
goal is to break even. You can help by trying out a few of the
less-popular disks. Don't ask me to make a "quote" for you. Few who ask for "quotes" ever make an order, so I stopped doing them. Figure it yourself using this guide, or just fill out the form like a regular request, and you'll get the exact total. If you leave out your complete mailing address, your form will be ignored, unless your address is already on file. If you still want a quote, please see the quote information page. |
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If you are
outside the US, note that you must pay in US dollars, and checks and money
orders must be payable by a US bank. Foreign money orders must (1) be drawn on a US
Bank, (2) they must be payable
in US dollars, and (3) they must be payable in the Federal Reserve System. Look at this
foreign bank draft on the right.
It was purchased by
someone in Kuwait, and she was told that it was a "US dollar money order" but
that is not true. Notice that it does not have a row of large black numbers along
its bottom edge such as US checks all have. This means that it is not payable in
the US Federal Reserve System, and fails requirement #3 above. If you send me a
foreign bank draft of this type, I cannot deposit it into my bank
account. My bank can only cash this check by employing an agent to go to the
bank it is addressed to (Wachovia bank in New York, in this case) and presenting it
there. Since I live thousands of miles from that bank, I cannot do it myself. My
bank can do this procedure (called "sending out for collection") but they will charge
me a fee of $35 for it. That is a large fee for a small check. So, be sure
that foreign money orders have the row of Federal Reserve code numbers along the
bottom edge of the check - that way you know it really can be deposited in the
USA. You can get proper US dollar money orders in most offices of
American Express, Barclay's Bank, or Thomas Cook travel agencies, and you will not have to
send me the extra fee of $35 fee. However, I am still reluctantly
willing to accept a foreign bank draft if you are
willing to pay the expensive $35 extra fee. See special services
below for information on how to send a foreign bank draft.
A note on the playing time:
|
more information on the samurai drama "Komyo Ga Tsuji". |