Not wanting to open up the tin of worms regarding CD-R/RW`s too much

But I have noticed that they appear to suffer in the cold a lot more than standard discs. There is almost a watermark / film residue within the layers when cold. Is it that the sides are not sealed as well as production discs?
Can any of the guys who know about the disc construction verify or add to this observation?
:-?
Doubt for one minute it is how well sealed the dye is, more likely to be crap construction during the production process.
I still have CD-R media here (Philips Gold) that works just as well now as it did when it was burnt 16 years ago, yet I've had other media (name truly escapes me, but it was cheap crap) that failed within 3 months of being burnt due to "fogging".
For what it's worth, any player capable of reading CD-RW media is much more likely to put up with sub standard media thanks to CD-RW needing AGC to work correctly - whereas the laser gain is fixed with CD-R and not adjustable by the end user.