I watched the same video, pretty interesting and amazing how many scratches gets onto the disk just by putting it in and out of the drive.
I have some Blu-ray disks that I formatted so they can be used like a USB stick, just pull files onto them, I formatted them with the LG drive in my PC, but they won't work on the Asus external drive, I can read them via the LG, but for some reason the LG is not writing to any Blueray, which is why I got the external drive as I can also use it with my Mac.
I got some more Blu-ray rewritable disks called Media range, they seem to be okay and a good price.
Don't forget that the disks in the video, were new, old stock, so could have been stored for a few years.
i remember in the early days of CD writing, when my mate and me for that matter had a SCSI Yamaha drive, and we used gold disks, useless, they were, after a few months the gold started to flake off the top. Thankfully, the technology got better pretty quick and drives got faster, writing CD at single speed was not fun, certainly if you had a few of them.
I remember the old 233 writing disks for him to send his music out. I miss those days.
I still use optical, mainly Blu-ray these days, but still a few CDs.
The external Asus drive is a strange thing, i think it is a laptop drive stuck into a case
https://www.asus.com/motherboards-components/optical...
Adrian
Desktop machines Mac mini pro with macOS Sequoia, also pc Ryzen powered with windows something or other.
Zooming with Zzoomm FTTP,