Shopping Cart

Your cart is empty.

Your cart is empty.

Philips DR8S8B50F/17 50 Pack 8X DVD+R DL Spindle

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$34.99

$ 16 .99 $16.99

In Stock

About this item

  • 50-pack pack of recordable DVDs
  • Each disc holds up to 8.5GB of music, video or other data


Philips DVD+R Double Layer disc offers 8.5 gigabytes or 4 hours of write-once storage capacity, with up to 8X writing speeds. Double Layer nearly doubles the storage capacity of a standard DVD with two recording layers on a single-sided disc so there is no need to flip the disc. It is great to backup games and movies. Philips, the inventor of the CD/DVD technology offers high-quality, highly reliable qualified media.


Ma.Auxilio González
Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2024
Está muy bien y lo utilizaremos según la necesidadSin problema
Matt
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2024
Guess I should have read the reviews first. Yes, you will get a LOT of bad discs. Out of 50, maybe 35 will be good, if you're lucky. The rest are just coasters. Buy a different brand, like literally ANY other brand. These are garbage. And let me mention the speed. They say 8x but you will only get 2.4x no matter what kind of drive you use. These are just horrible quality discs. Avoid at all costs.
J.C. Coleman
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2020
Name brand discs at a great price. Holds a movie or plenty of videos, music, photos, or whatever. Even after adding tax it still works out to 59¢ per disc for me. Quality control is good. There might be one or two duds in the stack, but even after that it’s still an awesome value. Highly recommended.
Charles W.
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2018
I have been using these for some time. I have not had a single failure in recording these disks I am on my 3rd spindle.Those who have had problems - Please note these are DVD+R not DVD-R. They are not the same, they are two different standards. Most newer DVD drives that record handle both standards of blank media, as does mine. But some older drives are either -R or +R and will not record with the wrong media. Based on the fact that I have not had a single failure and some have claimed ever disk failed I suspect in those cases they had an incompatible DVD Drive. Once written either the recorded -R, +R, or prerecorded DVD’s should play in any DVD drive, But the recording process is more picky.The good:Very good price for a double layer (8.5G) +R recordable disk.I have had zero failures in all the DVD’s I have recorded.Could Use Improvement:The spindle cover that holds the blank DVD’s could be a bit more robust. I have dropped the spindle just two feet and it broke the tabs that kept the cover on. No damage to the disks, just that the spindle cover was no longer latching on. It’s not a big deal.
WilliamB
Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2016
Wow! I didn't even realize I could burn dual layer DVD's and didn't even look into it until I had a need for a data DVD with more than 4.7 GB of space. Nor was I aware that my DVD burner could do this. Surprise surprise. It all works. Good quality DVD +R DL disks at an excellent price.
Upshifter
Reviewed in the United States on January 16, 2012
The disks arrived on time, the packaging was good, and the first disk out worked just fine. I'll make a followup report if I should have problems with the disks. From the looks of them I will be very surprised if anything is wrong with them. As a test, I did a disk copy using Nero with this first disk; and I played it back on a different computer.People talk about DVD brand names, stating that an expensive brand is better than a cheaper one. Well, I use a lot of them and brand names don't give a good indication of quality. One brand I know always gets more money for theirs, but they fail more often than even the least expensive generic ones. I once bought 100 name brand DVD+R disks from a chain office supply store. Ten out of a hundred were bad. I took the bad ones back to the store and the store manager replaced them with 10 new disks, so much for brand names. So, my point is; save your money and buy the cheapest ones you can find
Duff Man
Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2010
must make an initial disclosure. "Recordable" DVDs are inherently a difficult beast with which to deal. I have tried most every brand, and it does not matter whether I am editing a home movie, using them with my DVR, or simply storing data, there are always hiccups with each brand. This also includes cross-platform usage (e.g. Windows, Linux, Mac).You might now understand why I call them "Recordables." See, they don't always behave that way, and you might end up with a cheap cup coaster ;-)With that being said, Philips "Recordables" are the best I have experienced thus far. They have the least instances of hiccups, and don't seem to cause my drives as much angst. That is, they are more consistent than any other brand I have used (Sony, Memorex, Verbatim, HP, et al).That BY NO MEANS implies that they are PERFECT. In fact, they are FAR FROM IT. I believe that if any of these companies want to stay in business, they should make their products MUCH MORE stable.Keep this in mind as you seek to purchase "Recordables."
F. DELEON
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2009
(Update, added 09/07/2009)To-date, DVD-DL burning at rates of 1x to 4x has yielded one (1) failure out of 35 (less than 3%) using the Samsung SH-S203N SATA device. Will, definitely, buy more of this product again. Good luck!Hello All,We purchased a 50-pk spindle for $39.99 plus shipping (comes out to 90 cents a piece). We use a recently installed Samsung SATA SH-S203N DVD+-RW/RAM (updated to SB02 firmware). Our installed RecordNow! from Sonic (v6.5.1) does not recognize the DVD drive's double layer capability. We downloaded and installed DVD Decrypter v3.5.4.0 (freeware) and use it to successfully decrypt DVDs for backup purposes, even with RCE protection, generating files onto the PC's local hard drive. We downloaded and installed ImgBurn v2.4.2 (freeware, v2.5.0 also available) and use it to successfully create .ISO image files, also onto the PC's local hard drive, of the decrypted DVD files. We, again, use ImgBurn to successfully burn the .ISO image files to the blank Philips DL DVDs loaded into the Samsung SH-S203N DVD drive. Excellent results with write speeds of 1X, 2X and 4X. Tip: When generating the .ISO files from the source decrypted DVD files, target the .ISO files to a different physical hard drive, if available -- the process goes much faster as different hard drives and, thus, different write heads are used (if targeted to the same physical hard drive as the source decrypted DVD files, the drive's heads have to perform both read (source) and write (target) functions. Good luck!