OK, so we all know about the little compound gear that ends up with all its teeth shaved off on these OG CD units. Currently there is no replacement (no easy ones, anyway).
And we also know about the problem with CD units (Duos, mostly, it seems) getting somehow stuck at the end of their travel. This has happened a couple of times to me on my Duos. Manually moving the laser back fixes the problem. This has only ever happened to me while playing CD-Rs, and while it seems to be common nowadays, I don't remember ever having heard of it when in the PCE was kicking big time in the pre-CD-R days. This, IMO, is the #1 cause of the "CD-Rs kill PCEs" theory. Exactly why this happens I can't know, but its safe to say that the two most believable theories are that 1) A CD-R takes up a higher percentage of a CD's 5" diameter, therefore the laser ends up further out than usual, and 2) something about CD-Rs cause the PCE/CDROM2 laser mechanism to wig out and to max out its travel for some other reason than there actually being data there out on the edge.
Recently it has occurred to me that these things may be related. Someone may have mentioned this before, if so, credit goes to them. I came up with this theory because I recently had donated to me a broken CDROM2 unit. JBoyPacMan gave it to me and all that was known is that it didn't work. I took it home and opened it up hoping that it might be resurrected by manually moving the laser since it seemed to be at the outside of its travel. When I opened it I discover that, in addition to that problem, several of the compound gear teeth were missing.
Well, 2+2 and all that...its obvious from the condition of the gear that the laser didn't move itself into that position under its own power while in that state, so it must have broken once it was there, probably while trying to get back.
So in other words, what if the leading cause of the shattered compound gear was a combination of the aged plastic and the excessive travel caused by CD-R confusion? In other words, while its not fair to say that CD-Rs kill these drives exactly, it seems like it would be a good idea to not use CD-Rs in OG CD units. Also, it would be a good idea to shoot some lithium grease in there, IMO. The two I've recently worked on were quite dry. Its obvious we need a real solution to this problem (hopefully soon) but until then, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, as they say.
I'd like to see more discussion on this.