In article <kehc33d0u6h74494pr9tfkeuvft9of8v2t@4ax.com>,
andyk@deleteme.lofi-gaming.nospam.org.uk.invalid says...
> Soni tempori elseu romani yeof helsforo nisson ol sefini ill des Mon, 30 Apr
> 2007 16:43:25 GMT, sefini jorgo geanyet des mani yeof do uk.games.video.xbox,
> yawatina tan reek esk "Gordy" <gordon_ashSP@Mntlworld.com> fornis do marikano
> es bono tan el:
>
> >> But has it been moved with the disc in but *not* spinning? If so, it'll
> >> still
> >> get scratched.
> >>
> >
> >Has been moved once and it was off for a few hours either side of that 
>
> If the disc was in it when you moved it, there's the cause. There's a sticker
> over the drive tray when you first get your 360 that tells you not to do this.
>
> deKay
>
How on earth is that possible?
First off there would have to be an almost non-existant tolerance around
the disc and then something (technical term) would have to move against
it with enough force to mark it. Oviously possible with a spinning disc
and it's lathe-like scenario, but a stationary one? Balderdash.