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- X-Last-Updated: 2004/04/15
- Organization: none
- From: fadden@fadden.com (Andy McFadden)
- Newsgroups: comp.publish.cdrom.hardware,comp.publish.cdrom.software,comp.publish.cdrom.multimedia,alt.comp.periphs.cdr,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.answers
- Distribution: world
- Subject: [comp.publish.cdrom] CD-Recordable FAQ, Part 3/4
- Followup-To: comp.publish.cdrom.hardware
- Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about CD recorders, CD-R media, CD-RW,
- and CD premastering.
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 16 Apr 2004 12:56:13 GMT
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-
- Archive-name: cdrom/cd-recordable/part3
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: 2004/04/15
- Version: 2.53
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: [4] Problems
- (2000/06/05)
-
- Problems that arise when burning a CD-R.
-
- Some suggestions that fix most common problems:
-
- - RTFM (Read The Fine Manual). Sometimes it's *supposed* to work that
- way. If you didn't receive a manual with the product, it may be in
- text or Acrobat form on a CD-ROM.
- - Check your software version. You may need a newer version of the
- software for correct operation with your hardware (yes, even if you
- received the software with the recorder). Most, if not all,
- CD recorder software publishers have web sites with updates.
- - Update the software. Even if the software is new enough to be
- compatible, there's some chance that your bug has already been fixed.
- - Under Windows, check your ASPI layer. See section (4-44) for URLs
- and notes.
- - If you've tweaked your PC BIOS to the limit and are overclocking
- everything, reset it to defaults and see if your problems clear up.
- You can always tweak it back. If you're using a motherboard with
- a VIA chipset, make sure you are running the absolute latest version
- of the VIA drivers.
- - Some problems with PC ATAPI drives go away when DMA is turned off for
- the drive (via the Win9x device manager; see section (5-15-1)). You
- might also need to uninstall incompatible bus-mastering drivers
- (section (5-15)).
- - Under Windows, rename \Windows\System\Iosubsys\scsi1hlp.vxd to
- something that prevents it from being loaded ("scsi1hlp.vx_"). See
- if your problems get better. scsi1hlp.vxd is only required for
- compatibility with old SCSI devices.
- - If you have an older recorder, and it seems to be getting progressively
- worse over time, it may need to be cleaned. See section (3-30).
-
-
- Subject: [4-1] What does "buffer underrun" mean?
- (2002/11/15)
-
- It means you have an attractive new coaster for your table.
-
- Generally speaking, the CD recording process can't be interrupted in
- mid-session. Once the laser starts writing, any interruption would create
- a physical gap on the disc that could confuse CD readers. The recorder
- must always have data to write, from the moment the recording starts until
- the session ends. To avoid a situation where a temporary slowdown in the
- computer causes the write process to fail, the makers of CD recorders
- put a write buffer in the drive, usually between 512K and 4MB in size.
- Data read from the hard drive, tape, or another CD is stored in the buffer,
- and pulled out as needed by the recorder.
-
- If the recorder requests data from the write buffer, but there's none there,
- it's called a buffer underrun. The disc is still spinning, but there's no
- data to write, so the recording process aborts.
-
- This was a very common and very annoying problem for many years, so
- most recorders released in 2001 or later have optional "buffer underrun
- protection" features available. See section (2-31).
-
- You can sometimes use a disc that failed during writing by closing the
- session and starting another, assuming there's enough space left on the
- CD, and assuming your pre-mastering software didn't choose to finalize the
- disc for you. If you were using disc-at-once recording, you're probably
- out of luck.
-
- Advice for preventing buffer underruns is scattered throughout this FAQ.
- A brief summary:
-
- - If your hardware and software support it, enable buffer underrun
- protection. Usually this is just a checkbox.
- - Use a fast, AV-friendly hard drive (i.e. one that doesn't do slow
- thermal recalibrations). Pretty much all drives sold since the
- late 1990s fall into this category.
- - Record at a slow speed - it takes longer to empty the buffer when
- recording at 1x.
- - Don't do anything else with the computer while recording. Don't record
- from a file server.
- - Defragment your HD, especially if you're doing on-the-fly recording.
- (But don't defragment *while* you're recording.)
- - Record from a disc image file rather than on-the-fly.
- - Depending on your setup, putting the recorder and your hard drive on
- separate SCSI or IDE controllers may be helpful.
- - Keep your CD-R cool. Sometimes the drives fail when they overheat,
- with a buffer underrun or an inability to finalize a session. This
- is rarely a problem with drives made in 2000 or beyond.
-
- Also watch out for things like anti-virus programs that wake up, virtual
- memory settings that cause swapping, screen savers that activate during the
- CD creation process, unusual network activity, and background downloads of
- data or faxes. One way to check is to run the HD defragmenter in Win9X.
- If it restarts every few seconds, it's because something is hitting the
- drive.
-
- Some game discs use a form of copy protection where bad sectors are
- deliberately placed on the original CD. Attempting to copy one of these
- discs on the fly may fail, because some CD-ROM drives slow down and
- repeatedly try to read the "damaged" blocks. The slowdown may result in
- a buffer underrun before the CD-ROM drive reports an error.
-
- A utility included with Microsoft Office, called "FindFast", will
- occasionally start up and scan your hard drives. Disabling this by
- deleting the shortcut in the Windows\Start Menu\Programs\StartUp folder may
- be necessary.
-
- If you're using Windows, see the sub-sections on Auto-Insert Notification
- and VCACHE settings, below.
-
-
- http://www.roxio.com/en/support/cdr/bufunder.html has a comprehensive
- collection of buffer underrun info.
-
- http://www.adaptec.com/support/configuration/cdrec.html is interesting
- reading for users with CD-Rs attached to Adaptec SCSI cards. They're
- pretty far on the conservative side, but if you're having trouble this may
- help you.
-
- An article by Dana Parker entitled "CD-R on the Safe Side: Seven Rules of
- Successful CD Recording" in the April 1997 issue of Emedia Professional
- listed the Seven Habits of Successful CD-R Users:
-
- 1. Defragment Your Disk
- 2. Use a Partition for Staging Input
- 3. Create a Real Image
- 4. Test before writing
- 5. Stabilize Your System for CD-R
- 6. Shut Down Other Applications
- 7. After the Burn: Label and Test
-
- If you really want to be careful, you can shut down background stuff under
- Win95/98 with WinSolo from http://www.procode.com.au/winsolo/ (the web site
- was down at last update, but a search for it on http://www.google.com/
- turned up a number of shareware sites that have it). Another option is
- WinTasks from http://www.liutilities.com/products/wintasksstd/; see
- http://www.liutilities.com/products/wintasksstd/tutorials/tutorial1/ for
- a tutorial.
-
- (Side note for search engines: some versions of Ahead's Nero refer to
- buffer underruns as "loss of streaming".)
-
-
- Subject: [4-1-1] What's the deal with Windows Auto-Insert Notification (AIN)?
- (1999/09/12)
-
- Some of the Windows-based recording software recommend turning off
- Auto-Insert Notification. Having this on can interfere with closing
- sessions or even just inserting discs into the drive. Most of the recent
- software will disable it automatically, but some of the older products
- require you to disable it manually. You can do so under Win95/Win98 by
- opening the "System" icon in the Control Panel, and selecting "Device
- Manager". For each item under CD-ROM, select the device, click on the
- "Settings" tab, and make sure the "Auto Insert Notification" checkbox is
- unchecked. [With a vanilla Win95 setup I got SCSI errors when AIN was off
- for my CD-R but on for my CD-ROM, even if the CD-ROM drive wasn't in use at
- the time.]
-
- If you're using WinNT, you can turn it off with the "TweakUI" program
- available in PowerToys (available from the Microsoft web site at
- http://www.microsoft.com/), or by modifying a registry key with Regedit32
- (0=disabled, 1=enabled):
-
- HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SYSTEM \ CurrentControlSet \ Services \ Cdrom \ Autorun
-
- If your software automatically turns AIN off, and you can't figure out how
- to turn it back on, the TweakUI program may be able to help. Check the
- "Paranoia" settings. (Incidentally, if installing the Power Toys screws up
- your icons, select "Rebuild Icons" from the "Repair" menu.) If you turn it
- off and on again, You may have to reboot in some configurations before it
- will work again.
-
- Sidebar: the trouble with Auto Insert Notification is that it periodically
- attempts to find a valid disc in the CD recorder. A blank disc isn't very
- interesting to Windows, so nothing happens. When the table of contents is
- written to the disc, it suddenly becomes interesting; and if Autorun or
- Autoplay are enabled, enough activity is generated by Windows' attempts to
- read the disc that the write fails.
-
- Because it only affects CDs with actual data being written to them, a test
- write won't end in failure. It can be very frustrating to have 100%
- success with test writes and 100% failures with actual writes! With
- disc-at-once recording, the process will abort very near the start of
- recording, probably leaving an empty but useless disc. With track-at-once
- recording, it will fail at the end, and you may still be able to finalize
- the disc. Audio CDs will most likely work fine even if interrupted at the
- end of the write process.
-
- IMPORTANT: if you are using DirectCD for Windows, you must have AIN turned
- *on*, or some things won't work quite right. The most obvious failure mode
- is that long filenames aren't shown, but some reports indicate that data on
- the disc can get trashed as well. This can make life interesting if you're
- also using a conventional writing application, unless the application is
- good about turning AIN off before writing. The other Windows applications
- currently sold by Roxio (notably Easy CD Creator) will automatically
- disable Auto-Insert Notification when appropriate and re-enable it
- afterward, so you don't have to worry about AIN at all.
-
-
- Subject: [4-1-2] What's all this about Win9x VCACHE settings?
- (2001/07/09)
-
- One problem with Win95 is that by default the size of the file cache is
- unrestricted. This means that all available memory will eventually get
- filled up with file data, which will cause the virtual memory system to
- start swapping out pages from executing applications. When something needs
- to be executed from a page that has been swapped out, it takes time to pull
- it back in off the disk. While this is happening, the CD recorder's buffer
- could drain completely.
-
- The procedure is simple:
-
- (1) Open the file SYSTEM.INI with a text editor. This file is usually
- C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.INI.
- (2) Find the section labeled "[vcache]".
- (3) Add the following lines *after* the "[vcache]" line:
- MinFileCache = 16384
- MaxFileCache = 16384
- (4) Save the changes to the file, and reboot.
-
- The above values are recommended for a system with at least 64MB of RAM.
- A common rule of thumb is to set "maxfilecache" to 25% of your RAM, up
- to a maximum setting of 16MB. Because of (actual or perceived) bugs in
- Win95, some people recommend setting "minfilecache" and "maxfilecache" to
- the same value.
-
- If you have an older system with only about 16MB of RAM, you might want
- to use instead:
-
- MinFileCache = 512
- MaxFileCache = 4096
-
- The [vcache] change has reportedly cured severe buffer underrun problems
- with some versions of CDRWIN and removed popping noises during digital
- audio extraction with Easy CD Creator. It's a good thing to do to any PC
- running Win95. It's not necessary for WinNT. It's not clear whether this
- will help with Win98, but it doesn't seem to hurt.
-
- If you are uncomfortable tweaking your SYSTEM.INI file, try CacheMan at
- http://www.outertech.com/. It allows you to modify the above settings,
- and a few more besides.
-
-
- Subject: [4-2] I can't get long Win95 filenames to work right
- (1998/04/06)
-
- Typical symptoms can be described like this:
-
- - Works fine in Win95 Explorer
- - Under DOS the directories are visible, but instead of "dirname<tilde>1"
- you get "dirname<tilde>57". Attempting to read them results in errors.
- - Typing 'cd dirname~102' may fail while 'cd "Long File Names without the ~"'
- will work.
-
- The problem occurs when certain CD-R writing programs are used to create
- the discs. The short and long forms of the filenames are sorted
- differently, so some of the files can't be found. Using newer software
- (e.g. Easy CD Creator 3 instead of Easy-CD Pro) should produce better
- results.
-
-
- Subject: [4-3] I can't read the multisession CD I just made
- (1998/04/06)
-
- The SCSI driver needs to believe that the CD-ROM drive can handle
- multisession discs. Most likely you will need to update your SCSI drivers
- before this will work.
-
- (This problem was reported with an HP4020i and a Buslogic BT946C controller;
- if you have an HP drive you should get the c4324hlp.vxd driver from the HP
- web site. See section 6 for the address.)
-
- One possible cause of this problem is writing a multisession disc in MODE-1
- format. Some older CD-ROM drives incorrectly assume that a MODE-1 disc
- can't be multisession, so they don't look for additional sessions unless
- it's written in MODE-2 (CD-ROM/XA) format.
-
- Also, if the final session on the CD isn't closed, standard CD players may
- become confused (the NEC 6Xi certainly does under Win95). This doesn't
- mean that the *disc* must be closed, just that the *session* must be
- closed. (Actually, the NEC 6Xi doesn't like open discs either... sigh.)
-
- A note on one of the Ricoh pages indicates that the Ricoh 1420C is unable
- to read sessions smaller than 3 minutes (about 26MB) until firmware 1.6x.
-
-
- Subject: [4-4] Write process keeps failing N minutes in
- (1998/04/06)
-
- There's a couple of possibilities. One is that your data source can't keep
- up with the CD-R; try using disc-at-once writing from a disc image with the
- speed set to 1x. If it seems to be getting worse over time, you may just
- need to defragment your hard drive.
-
- If that fails, a number of people have discovered that the problem is a
- faulty CD-R unit (similar behavior has been reported on Sony and HP units,
- which have different mechanisms). You should try 1x writing from a fast
- source and with different sets of data before contacting the manufacturer,
- since they will likely tell you to do exactly that anyway.
-
- Be sure that there aren't environmental factors creating difficulties.
- CD-R units are usually built to handle small shocks, but having a set of
- speakers playing loud music on the same table as a CD-R may cause it to
- skip, resulting in a failed write. Sonic booms, heavy construction
- equipment, and nuclear detonations may have similar effects.
-
- It's also possible that you simply have a bad batch of media. Try a
- different type and brand of disc. Some distributors (e.g. dataDisc) will
- exchange media that's provably defective.
-
- Be careful with Advanced Power Management functions on some PCs. If the
- keyboard and IDE devices are completely idle, the system may decide that
- nothing is going on and switch to a low-power mode. Ditto for screen
- savers that kick in after the system has been idle for a certain period.
-
-
- Subject: [4-5] Why did my CD-R eject between the "test" and "write" passes?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- Most CD recorders need to clear their memory between the "test" pass and
- the "write" pass. For some recorders, the only command that does this is
- "eject". If the recorder has a tray it just goes out and back in, but if
- it uses a caddy manual intervention is needed.
-
- Some CD-R packages allow you to start the real write pass a few seconds
- after the test pass has succeeded. They may not disable this even though
- they know that the disc will have to be ejected. Make sure the option is
- set to "wait until told to continue."
-
-
- Subject: [4-6] My CD-ROM drive doesn't like *any* CD-R discs
- (1998/04/06)
-
- A very simple test is to take a CD that DOES work, copy it, and try both
- (this ensures that your problems aren't being caused by, for example, a
- drive that doesn't support multisession CDs).
-
- Sometimes the firmware can be at issue. In one specific case, a Goldstar
- GCD580B CD-ROM drive was able to read CD-Rs under Win95 but not MS-DOS
- 6.22. Upgrading the firmware from v1.01 to v1.24 solved the problem.
-
- If it fails with different kinds of media, the CD-ROM drive either doesn't
- like discs written with your recorder, or doesn't like CD-R media at all.
- In one case, returning the CD-ROM for an identical unit resolved the
- problems.
-
- While there are stringent specifications for discs, there are no such
- specifications for CD players and CD-ROM drives. They just have to play
- the discs. If the disc and the drive are both marginal, you lose.
-
-
- Subject: [4-7] How do I avoid having a ";1" on my ISO-9660 discs?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- The ISO-9660 standard says the version number (a semicolon followed by a
- number at the end of every filename) has to be there. Most operating
- systems simply ignore it, but until recently the Mac didn't, causing some
- problems.
-
- (For the Mac, look at "ISO 9660 File Access" in the System:Extensions
- folder with Command-I. If the version shown is 5.0 or greater, your system
- should handle the version numbers just fine. If not, you should update
- your system software.)
-
- If you can't find a way to work around it, "mkisofs" has an option to omit
- the version number when constructing an ISO-9660 image.
-
-
- Subject: [4-8] I keep getting SCSI timeout errors
- (1998/04/06)
-
- http://www.adaptec.com/support/configuration/cdrec.html has some advice on
- SCSI configuration. Basically, check your cabling and termination (see
- section (4-17) for more advice there), turn off features you don't need,
- and make sure Auto Insert Notification is off (see section (4-1-1)).
-
-
- Subject: [4-9] I'm having trouble writing a complete disc
- (2002/08/16)
-
- (This is for failures other than buffer underruns. For those, see
- section (4-1) and perhaps section (4-4).)
-
- If it's failing right as the disc is being finalized, and you're recording
- in track-at-once mode, try recording in disc-at-once mode instead. It has
- been suggested that some recorder+media combinations have trouble reading
- the PMA (Program Memory Area, where a copy of the TOC is kept until the
- disc is finalized) at the end of a write. With disc-at-once mode the
- TOC is written early, so it doesn't have to get read out of the PMA.
- See section (2-19) for the low-down on disc finalization.
-
- When in doubt, check your ASPI layer. See section (4-44).
-
- One user with an ATAPI recorder found that disabling DMA (from the Win98
- peripheral properties) made things better.
-
- Try letting the drive cool down (leave the machine off for a couple of
- hours if you have an internal drive). Power up the machine and
- immediately record the disc. Sometimes heat buildup can cause problems,
- though this is less common with recent drives.
-
-
- This was happening frequently with the HP4020i running off an AdvanSys SCSI
- card under Win311 (i.e. WfWG). The solution here was to remove IFSHLP.SYS
- from the CONFIG.SYS. (IFSHLP.SYS is somehow involved with 32-bit file
- access and network support, so you may have to disable both of these before
- disabling IFSHLP. You may have better luck under Win95.)
-
- Another user with the same setup found that doing power-up diagnostics and
- device reset right before burning the CD helped.
-
-
- Subject: [4-10] What's the CDD2000 Write Append Error / spring problem?
- (2000/08/08)
-
- This seems to happen on Philips CDD2000-based units, such as the HP4020i,
- usually a short while after the warranty runs out. The most common cause
- is a spring that weakens with age, but it might also be due to lubrication
- breakdown. After a while, the recorder starts failing when trying to write
- beyond a certain point on the disc.
-
- The ways of dealing with this range from minor system changes to the
- placement of chicken entrails on selected components. Reducing the DMA
- rate on the AdvanSys SCSI card (for the HP4020i) may help, buying better
- SCSI cables and checking for proper termination may make a difference, or
- even powering off and on again right before the burn. For some users,
- however, the problem is mechanical rather than spiritual.
-
- One user was told by Philips tech support that if error 50h (write append)
- occurs, it means the drive has to be returned to the repair center. Other
- users have been told that the error can occur when attempting to write an
- empty directory or zero-length file. Under Easy-CD Pro '95, this is
- reported as error 171-00-50-00 (see the Roxio web site for a complete
- list of error codes).
-
- If the fault is caused by the worn spring, it may be possible to fix the
- problem by replacing the spring. This will definitely void your warranty,
- and you shouldn't even think about trying this unless the only alternative
- is to throw the drive away. Jonathan Oei posted some details about the
- process (search for comp.publish.cdrom.hardware, subject "CDD2000 & Spring
- Fix", on http://newsone.net/), and a detailed description of the
- procedure can be found on http://www.fadden.com/doc/fix-hp4020i.txt.
-
- This procedure requires some special tools (mini torx drivers and really
- fine jeweller's pliers), and involves disassembling much of the drive. If
- you open up the drive and remove the circuit boards, you will see that the
- laser writing assembly is moved by a DC stepper motor. The motor has a
- plastic drive gear that is meshed with a plastic "rack" on the laser. The
- spring in question is a piece of wire that pushes the rack against the
- drive gear, so when it weakens the gear slips and the write fails.
- Replacing the 0.012" wire with a 0.02" diameter wire solves the problem.
-
- The high temperature in the drive may contribute to the breakdown of the
- lubricants that allow the laser head to travel. You may be able to prevent
- the situation by installing a fan.
-
- This question is also covered in the HP4020i FAQ, available at
- http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/Technology/CD-R/HP-FAQ.html.
-
-
- Subject: [4-11] Getting errors reading the first (data) track on mixed-mode CD
- (1998/08/16)
-
- There's a 150-sector postgap at the end of the data track. Most programs
- deal with this automatically, some older ones don't. If you're getting
- errors, try subtracting 150 from the total number of sectors to read for
- that track.
-
-
- Subject: [4-12] My recorder ejects blank discs immediately
- (2002/05/02)
-
- There are a few of possibilities, some software and some hardware.
-
- It may be that the system is looking at the disc, not finding a TOC (table
- of contents), and ejecting it as useless. One way to tell the difference
- between the operating system rejecting the CD and the drive rejecting the
- CD is to unplug the SCSI or IDE cable from the back of the CD recorder
- before inserting the disc.
-
- If the drive pauses for a little while before ejecting, it may be rejecting
- the media. On some units you get a blinking warning light instead. If
- this is happening, try a different brand of media.
-
- If the problem is the operating system, you probably need to disable
- certain features. Under Win95, disable auto insertion for all CD-ROM
- devices (see section (4-1)). One user found that reinstalling Win95
- helped. On the Mac, you may just need more recent drivers. On a Solaris
- system, remove the recorder (probably the "cdrom" entry) from
- /etc/vold.conf.
-
- If that doesn't work, make sure the CD-R drive is perfectly level.
- Apparently some older (1996-ish) units were sensitive to being tilted at
- an angle. Some users have had trouble when a CD-R has been on for a while
- and has overheated, so if you only have trouble when the machine has been
- powered on for a while, try putting a small fan above the unit to blow
- air over it.
-
- With some drives, improper SCSI termination can cause this behavior.
-
- For the Yamaha CDR-200/CDR-400, this may be a sign that the drive has
- broken down and needs to be replaced. See section (5-1-1).
-
- If nothing helps, there's a strong possibility that the drive is mis-
- aligned and needs to be serviced. This has been known to happen to drives
- during shipping.
-
- One user with a caddy-based drive reported problems when using the wrong
- type of caddy. It has to be a Sony-type caddy, which is the kind most
- commonly found in stores.
-
-
- Subject: [4-13] I'm getting complaints about power calibration
- (2002/12/29)
-
- The optical power output range of the laser in a low-speed CD-R is between
- 4 and 8 milliwatts. (By comparison, the read laser runs at about 0.5mW.)
- High-speed recorders and CD-RW devices use a greater range, up to about
- 40mW for 48X CD-R. At the top end of the scale are DVD-R recorders,
- which output around 100mW for 4x recording and 200mW for 16X recording.
- CD-R and CD-RW discs have a section outside the standard recording area
- called the Power Calibration Area (PCA) that is used to adjust the laser
- for the brand of media you're using and the speed at which you're recording.
-
- Power calibration errors indicate that the drive is having trouble
- calibrating the power setting. The most common cause is incompatibility
- with the media you're using -- if you just switched to a new brand or
- batch of media, this is a likely culprit -- but it can also be caused by
- a dirty lens or a dying recorder.
-
- If you're seeing "power calibration area full", it means the recorder
- ran out of space in the PCA area. There are 99 regions in the PCA area.
- After 99 attempts to calibrate the power level, there won't be any
- places left, and the recorder will report an error.
-
- Try a few different kinds of media to see if the problem is an
- incompatibility between your recorder and the discs you're using. If that
- doesn't make a difference, there are a couple of things you can do to
- mitigate the problem. First, you can try recording at a slower speed.
- The recorder will use a different "write strategy", which usually means a
- lower power level. Second, if you're storing the discs in a cold place,
- you may want to try heating them up to slightly above room temperature
- (placing them near a heating vent works). One user found that this helped.
-
- If all else fails, and the drive is still in warranty, you should have
- the drive checked by a repair facility. If it's out of warranty, or
- there's no easy way to have it checked out, you can try cleaning it.
- See section (3-30).
-
- Some versions of the firmware for the Philips CDD2000 (and HP 4020i) will
- report a power calibration error if you try to do a 1x write after a 4x
- read.
-
- It's also good to verify, if your CD recorder is an internal unit, that
- your power supply has enough capacity to run everything. Recent PCs
- systems should have a 300W or better power supply.
-
- One user found that his problems went away when he created an image file
- with Easy CD Creator, quit out of the program, restarted it, and then
- recorded from the image at a moderate speed. (Doesn't make much sense,
- but if it works, use it.)
-
-
- Subject: [4-14] My Adaptec 2940 pauses after finding my recorder
- (1998/04/06)
-
- This was observed with a Yamaha CDR-100. The solution is to go into the
- Adaptec BIOS (hit Ctrl-A during boot), and disable the "support removable
- disks under BIOS as fixed disks" option and the "boot from CD-ROM" option.
-
-
- Subject: [4-15] I can't see all the files on the CD-R
- (1998/04/06)
-
- There's a couple of possibilities: either they aren't there, or they're
- there but you can't see them. Looking at the disc from different machines
- (e.g. Mac and PC) should give you some idea.
-
- Out-of-date versions of MSCDEX have been known to "forget" certain files
- when browsing a disc. If you're using DOS or are using the "real mode"
- drivers from within Win95, make sure you're using the most recent version
- of MSCDEX.
-
- Old versions of certain CD creation programs would occasionally omit things
- when asked to burn a large number of files. These problems haven't been
- reported for some time, however.
-
- If you were burning a multi-session CD, read the next section.
-
-
- Subject: [4-16] My multi-session disc only has data from the last session
- (1998/06/14)
-
- A common mistake when burning a multisession CD is to forget to link the
- files from the previous session into the current one. This results in a CD
- where you can see the new files but none of the old, unless you have a
- program that lets you choose which session you look at.
-
- If you're using Easy-CD Pro for Win31, CD Creator, or Roxio Easy CD Creator
- v3+, you can load the contents of all the previous sessions, and burn a
- new session that has all the files you want. This feature wasn't available
- in Easy-CD Pro 95, which only allows you to link to one previous session.
-
- The files themselves aren't really lost. Most recording software will
- allow you to extract a track as an ISO-9660 image, and you can use WinImage
- (section (6-2-2)) to pull individual files out of it. If all else fails,
- CD-R Diagnostic (section (6-2-6)) claims to be able to recover data from
- "lost" sessions.
-
- One caution: without something like Roxio's Session Selector, you may not
- see the last session on the disc anyway. Some CD-ROM drives stop looking
- for sessions after a certain point.
-
-
- Subject: [4-17] I'm getting SCSI errors
- (1998/07/26)
-
- Good SCSI cables and correct termination are absolutely essential. SCSI
- bus errors can cause buffer underruns or corrupted data (especially since
- some vendors ship drives with parity checking disabled).
-
- Bertel Schmitt wrote an excellent article on the ins and outs of proper
- cabling and termination. The article can be found in text form at
- http://www.fadden.com/doc/scsi-trm.txt. Granite Digital, a company
- that makes high-quality cables and terminators, can be found at
- http://www.scsipro.com/.
-
- If you're using an HP 4020i with the AdvanSys SCSI card, reducing the DMA
- transfer rate may help.
-
-
- Subject: [4-18] Why doesn't the copy of an audio CD sound the same?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- There are actually two questions here, so I've split them into separate
- sections. The most common problem is that the audio extracted to the hard
- drive doesn't quite match the original.
-
-
- Subject: [4-18-1] Why doesn't the audio data on the copy match the original?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- Most problems are due to poor digital audio extraction from the source
- media. Some CD-ROM drives will return slightly different data every time
- an audio track is read. Others, like the Plextor line (e.g. 4Plex, 8Plex,
- and 12Plex, but not 6Plex) will return the same data every time so long as
- the source media is clean.
-
- The most fundamental problem is that, if the CD is dirty, the error
- correction may not be able to correct all of the errors. Some drives will
- interpolate the missing samples, some won't.
-
- Another problem some CD-ROM drives face is "jitter". See section (2-15)
- for details.
-
- See also section (3-3) on avoiding clicks in extracted audio, and section
- (5-5) on which CD-ROM drives are recommended.
-
-
- Subject: [4-18-2] The audio data matches exactly, why do they sound different?
- (2002/12/11)
-
- Suppose you extract the audio track from the copy, and it's an exact binary
- match of the track you wrote from your hard drive, but the CDs don't sound
- quite the same. What then?
-
- Most people don't notice any difference between originals and duplicates.
- Some people notice subtle differences, some people notice huge differences;
- on better CD players, the differences are harder to hear. Some say CD-R is
- better, some say worse. While it's true that "bits are bits", there *are*
- reasons why CD-Rs may sound different even when the data matches exactly.
-
- The most prominent problem is jitter. This isn't the DAE "jitter"
- described in section (2-15), but rather a timebase error. A good
- overview can be found in the jitter article on http://www.digido.com/.
- A brief explanation follows.
-
- The digital-to-analog ("D/A") conversion at the output of the CD player
- is driven by a clock in the CD player. The clock is tied into feedback
- mechanisms that keep the disc spinning at the proper speed. If the digital
- signal being read from the disc has irregular timing, small errors can be
- introduced into the output clock. Even if the CD player gets all of the
- digital bits accurately, it will produce inferior results if the timing
- of the bits on the disc isn't precise. Put another way, something has to
- send a sample to the speakers 44100 times per second, and if it's speeding
- up and slowing down many times each second your ears are going to notice.
-
- If you play a CD digitally (e.g. by ripping it and then playing it through
- a sound card), the quality of the CD doesn't matter, because it's the
- timing of the clock in the sound card that drives the D/A conversion.
-
- A fancy CD player could provide its own asynchronous clock to drive the
- DAC, buffering up bits and playing them out in carefully controlled time.
- This is tricky though, because when you have two clocks in a system they
- are likely to drift apart, and you have to deal with buffer underruns
- and overruns when one outpaces the other. (A man with two watches never
- knows what time it is, because the watches almost never agree.) The timing
- from the disc is generally good when considered over a long period, so the
- challenge to CD player manufacturers is to design circuitry that produces
- a stable timing signal from a somewhat unstable source.
-
- (This begs the question: does a CD player with anti-shock protection
- produce better sound? The player has to read the disc at 2x so it can
- buffer enough data to continue playing even when the CD player is jolted
- and loses tracking. Such players tend to do *worse* with CD-Rs because the
- methods they use magnify problems with marginal discs, but it's possible
- that they have less of a problem with jitter -- assuming, of course,
- that the clock they use is accurate and stable.)
-
- It has been asserted that the clocking of bits on a CD-R isn't as precise
- as on a pressed CD. Writing at different speeds on different types of
- media requires adjustments to the "write strategy" (section (3-31)) that
- can result in individual "marks" being sloppier than at other speeds.
- This could account for inferior -- or at least different -- sound.
-
- Yamaha believes they have found a partial solution for jitter problems
- with their Audio Master Quality feature. See section (2-41).
-
-
- Some people have asserted that *any* two CDs, pressed or otherwise, will
- sound slightly different. Some claim to hear differences in identical
- CDs from different pressing plants. The former is silly, but the latter
- makes sense if one pressing plant is using a less-precise technology.
-
- The manual for the CDD2000 reportedly states that the drive uses 4x
- oversampling when playing pressed CDs, but switches to 1x for CD-R.
- This affects the quality of the D/A conversion, and can make an audible
- difference.
-
- http://www.mrichter.com/cdr/primer/losses.htm has some further thoughts,
- including a table showing signal level differences.
-
- A paper was reportedly submitted to the Audio Engineering Society, entitled,
- "An Investigation of the Sonic Differences Between Numerically Identical
- Compact Discs", by Julian Dunn. Preprint 4339, the 101st AES convention.
-
- An extremely technical introduction to CD reading is available at
- http://www.tc.umn.edu/~erick205/Papers/paper.html. This may shed some
- light on why reading audio CDs is difficult, as well as explain concepts
- like aliasing and dither.
-
- If you are finding your CD-Rs to be noticeably inferior, try different media,
- different write speeds, a different player, or perhaps a different recorder.
- There is some evidence that different brands of media and recorders may
- work better for audio, but in the end it's a highly subjective matter.
- Some people say CD-Rs sound worse, some people say they sound better (and
- some people think vinyl records are still the best).
-
-
- Subject: [4-19] Digital audio extraction of a track is shifted slightly
- (1998/04/06)
-
- Some recorders don't correctly extract digital audio if the pregap of the
- first track isn't exactly two seconds. A bug in the firmware causes the
- drive to start extracting slightly past the start of the track, and stop
- extracting slightly past the end. This can result in an audible glitch if
- the music starts at the exact start of the track, and can cause the drive
- to fail with an error when extracting the last track on the CD.
-
- CDs that start at 00:02:32 (0 minutes, 2 seconds, and 32 blocks) are
- surprisingly common. The problem can be worked around manually, by looking
- at the output of Jeff Arnold's freeware TOC program (available from
- http://www.goldenhawk.com/) and supplying "/start=" and "/end=" parameters
- that adjust backward by the number of blocks in excess of two seconds.
-
- For example, if the first track started at 00:02:32, you would subtract
- 32 from the starting and ending Logical Block Addresses.
-
- A better solution is to use a CD-ROM drive that doesn't have this problem
- (and most likely can extract audio more quickly than the CD-R can).
-
- The Yamaha CDR-100/102 and the Philips CDD2600 are known to have this
- problem, though it may get fixed by a firmware update. The Ricoh 6200S
- reportedly does not return the disc's table of contents correctly for these
- sorts of discs.
-
- Newer recorders, and newer software, should deal with this situation
- correctly.
-
-
- Subject: [4-20] I can't play extracted audio files by double-clicking in Win95
- (2001/07/09)
-
- The default audio player in Win95 tries to load the entire file into
- memory. When an extracted track is 40 or 50MB, and you don't have that
- much RAM, Win95's virtual memory system starts writing pieces out to disk.
- The disk thrashes, and you get nowhere.
-
- There are several ways around this. If you right-click on the file
- and select "properties", you will see a "preview" tab. This will play
- it directly from disk. Another way is to use a different program.
- One possibility is the Media Player, which is optionally installed
- with Win95. You can make it the default WAV file player by selecting
- View/Options from Win95 explorer, clicking on the "File Types" tab, and
- choosing "Wave Sound". Double-click on Play and change the program name
- from "sndrec32.exe" to "mplayer.exe", leaving the "/play" and "/close"
- flags intact.
-
- The WMA player in more recent versions of Windows should work correctly.
-
-
- Subject: [4-21] I can't read an ISO-finalized packet-written disc
- (1998/04/06)
-
- This problem is often experienced by HP7100/7110 users. HP chose to ship
- packet-writing software with their drives rather than conventional
- premastering software, leaving users with discs that couldn't be read on a
- fair number of systems. (The HP7200 is the same drive, shipped with
- updated firmware and a more complete set of software.)
-
- The following is an excerpt from an Adaptec readme.txt file. It talks
- about DirectCD, but the problem is inherent in all packet writing
- solutions:
-
- "When the disc is in the native format used by DirectCD, you will
- only be able to read the disc on a CD-R device running DirectCD.
- This is a direct result of the technology used when writing to a
- CD-R disc. In order to make the disc readable on a standard CD-ROM
- DirectCD must write certain data to the disc. This provides
- compatibility with many of the current drives on the market today.
- Unfortunately, there are still a number of CD-ROM drives that
- cannot read the packet written media that DirectCD produces. If
- you experience problems in this area, you should go to System in
- Control Panel, select Performance, File System, CD-ROM and set the
- Access Pattern to "No Read-Ahead". If you still experience
- problems after making this adjustment, it is likely that the CD-
- ROM drive itself is having problems reading packet written media.
-
- It should also be noted that there is an industry initiative
- called MultiRead that addresses these issues and has the support
- of all the major vendors of CD-ROM and CD-R/RW devices. This
- initiative will eliminate the above problems and should be
- available on all new drives."
-
- If you want to share data between systems, and the remote system isn't
- guaranteed to have a MultiRead CD-ROM drive, you should write the disc
- with conventional software.
-
-
- Subject: [4-22] I'm finding corrupted files on the CD-ROMs I write
- (2000/10/20)
-
- There have been a fair number of people who have burned a CD-ROM only to
- discover that, while they can read text files, run applications, and look
- at graphics, they can't extract from .ZIP archives or run compressed
- applications (e.g. some "Setup.EXE"s under Win95). A common complaint
- is a dialog with "the file is not a valid win32 application".
-
- The problem they're seeing isn't just corruption of .ZIP files though.
- Most kinds of files have a lot of redundancy in them. If a single bit is
- lost out of a long text file, the chances of it being noticed are very
- slight. For an application, the chances of it causing a failure depend on
- where in the file the error falls. For a compressed file, though, every
- bit is significant, and in a .ZIP archive the CRC has a very high
- probability of detecting errors. (CRC is cyclic redudancy check. Most
- file archivers compute a 32-bit CRC on the uncompressed input and store it
- in the archive. When you extract the files, the CRC is checked to ensure
- that nothing has been damaged.)
-
- Eliminating these errors could be as simple as replacing a bad SCSI cable.
- One way to narrow the possibilities down is to try the disc in different
- readers on different machines. If the same error shows up in the same
- place, the error was introduced during writing rather than while reading
- the data back. Another thing to try is to burn the same disc twice. If
- the data written to the CD-Rs doesn't match the original, but they do match
- each other, then the errors are happening in the same place every time,
- rather than at random, so the trouble might be with a driver or firmware
- instead of a flaky cable or bad RAM.
-
- If a file appears to be getting corrupted on the CD-R, try copying it back
- to the hard drive and then comparing it to the original. If possible, see
- if the file is missing large chunks or just has sporadic damage
- throughout. You can use the DOS "fc" command (e.g. "FC /B FILE1 FILE2")
- or one of the fancier applications listed in section (3-22).
-
- If you can identify the problem as being with the reader or the writer you
- may be able to focus on just one part of your system. If the trouble
- appears to be with your writer, and you can't get it to work, try to move
- it to somebody else's system and see if it works from there. It's
- possible, though unlikely, that the CD recorder is flaky.
-
- Whatever the case, the place to start is to check all cables, connections,
- SCSI termination, L2 cache, and RAM. One user with an otherwise properly
- functioning system was able to fix the CD-R corruption problems by correcting
- the RAM timings in the BIOS setup. Use a memory tester, such as "Memtest86"
- from http://www.memtest86.com/, to look for bad RAM. A couple of others
- found that their problems went away when they disabled the L2 cache on the
- motherboard. Sometimes adding a new device will make cables (especially
- longer ones) turn flaky. Sometimes the flakiness only affects one device.
- Swapping the cables is inexpensive, easy, and very likely to root out
- the cause of your problems. Section (4-17) has some tips on SCSI stuff.
- If your problem is media compatibility, and the errors are a result of the
- BLER (error rate) exceeding the error correction's ability to fix them,
- then changing to a different brand of media might help.
-
- One last thing: make sure the original files are valid before you go on a
- wild goose chase!
-
-
- Subject: [4-23] Having trouble playing an audio CD in a home or car player
- (2001/07/09)
-
- There are a few possibilities. First and foremost is media compatibility.
- Not all players get along with all brands of CD-R media. You need to find
- a combination of recorder, media, and player that get along. Read section
- (7-2) to learn more. A CD-R media identifier (like the one listed in
- section (6-2-9)) can help you be sure that you're trying discs from
- different manufacturers, but they aren't 100% reliable (section (2-33)).
-
- If you're trying to use CD-RW media, your odds of success are worse than
- with CD-R. CD-RW discs simply won't play on most CD players.
-
- Another common problem is failing to close the disc at the end of writing.
- You can't play an audio CD on a common CD player until the session has been
- closed. You may be able to play it back with the CD recorder though.
- Also, don't forget that you have to write all of the audio data into the
- first session of a multisession CD. CD players don't know how to find the
- later sessions, so tracks written there won't get played.
-
- Sometimes the CD player will spin the disc up but won't start playing it.
- Sometimes it will have no problem playing the tracks, but will have a great
- deal of difficulty seeking between tracks or moving fast-forward. Using a
- different brand of media or a different CD player may produce better results.
-
- If you're getting skips and jumps, make sure that you don't have anti-skip
- protection enabled. This is usually only available on portable or car
- players, and you may not be able to disable it on car players. Car CD
- players are notoriously picky about media. See also section (4-40).
-
- One user with a Jensen car CD stereo was unable to use blanks immediately
- after recording them. After a couple of days, the discs suddenly started
- working. This "delayed finalizing" behavior appears consistently repeatable,
- not a one-time event. Recording at 1x instead of 4x resulted in discs
- that were immediately usable.
-
- Some media works better at 1x, 2x, or 4x than it does at other speeds. You
- may find that slowing down or speeding up the recorder helps.
-
- If the disc plays okay at first and starts sounding bad later, or it
- sounds okay on the first few tracks but gets noisy toward the end of
- the disc, see section (4-47).
-
- One reader reported that many CD players have a laser power adjustment that
- can be tweaked to improve things. Fiddling with the insides of devices
- you don't have manuals for is generally unwise, so don't go looking unless
- you're desperate.
-
- Finally, remember that you have to write the disc in CD-DA format! If you
- just write a bunch of .WAV files to a disc in CD-ROM format, it's not going
- to work in your home stereo.
-
-
- Subject: [4-24] Having trouble using a CD-ROM on a different machine
- (2002/09/22)
-
- As with audio CDs, discussed in the previous section, there are several
- possibilities. The media compatibility issues mentioned above apply to
- CD-ROM as well.
-
- If you're using CD-RW media rather than CD-R media, you have to be sure
- that the CD-ROM drive in question is MultiRead compliant. Some older
- drives are able to read CD-RW media, but most are not. Newer drives
- should work fine.
-
- If the disc was written using a packet writing application like DirectCD
- (where you format a disc and then copy files directly to it, instead of
- creating a disc layout and recording a whole bunch of stuff all at once),
- some CD-ROM drives will stumble on packet boundaries. Refer to section
- (4-21) for information and a possible workaround.
-
- If a packet-written disc was closed in ISO-9660 Level 3 format, it won't be
- usable on systems that don't support ISO-9660 level 3 (e.g. DOS). If the
- disc was *not* closed as ISO-9660, and is still in UDF, you will need a UDF
- driver; see sections (6-3) and (6-3-1) for an overview and pointers to free
- drivers. If the failing system is running Windows XP, see
- http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=KB;EN-US;Q321640& for an
- article on using UDF discs under XP.
-
-
- Subject: [4-25] I can't copy a VideoCD
- (1998/08/29)
-
- If you put a VideoCD (White Book) into your CD-ROM drive, you will see a
- bunch of files and directories like you would on any other CD-ROM. In
- fact, with the appropriate software installed, on some platforms you can
- double-click on a file to play the video.
-
- In practice, however, the video files are stored on separate tracks, using
- CD-ROM/XA MODE-2 FORM-2. This allows more data to be stored on a VideoCD,
- at the price of less error correction. If the video is short enough, you
- may be able to copy the disc as a collection of files, but some players may
- be unable to play back selections if the original disc had more than one
- track.
-
- You need to use a program like Roxio's CD Copier or GoldenHawk's CDRWIN
- to copy the disc track-by-track, preserving the mode of the original.
-
- If your drive only supports track-at-once recording, you may have trouble
- copying VideoCDs because the starting address gets shifted when the drive
- writes a gap between tracks. NTI's CD-Copy (section 6-1-12) gives you the
- option of dropping the last part of the previous track to preserve the
- start position of the next track.
-
- Note that MODE-2 FORM-2 holds 2324 bytes of data per sector, so instead of
- a total capacity of around 650MB, you can put closer to 740MB on a disc.
- If you don't record the VideoCD data files in the correct format, you will
- find yourself running out of room. (The extra space is gained by throwing
- out error correction codes that aren't necessary for video data. Writing
- ordinary data in this format is not recommended.)
-
-
- Subject: [4-26] The test write succeeds, but the actual write fails
- (2002/08/16)
-
- This often used to be a problem with auto-insert notification being enabled
- when it shouldn't be. See the discussion in section (4-1).
-
- If you're using track-at-once recording, and the actual write is failing
- when the disc is 100% complete and the TOC is being written, you may be
- able to solve your problems by using a different brand of media. See
- the notes in section (4-9).
-
- One person supposedly fixed a similar problem by replacing the power
- supply in their computer. Apparently the 200W supply wasn't enough to
- handle everything that was connected to it, and the resultant "brown out"
- may have been causing problems during writing.
-
-
- Subject: [4-27] I can no longer erase a particular CD-RW disc
- (2001/06/26)
-
- It's possible that the disc has developed a region that can't be erased.
- More likely is that the software or firmware is acting up. If you're using
- Easy CD Creator, insert a good CD-RW disc, and start the Erase process.
- Just before you hit the final "OK" button to start the erase, swap the
- troubled blank disc in place of the good one.
-
- If this succeeds, you probably ought to run it through the erase procedure
- one additional time before using it.
-
- Super Blank, from http://www.ping.be/kris-schoofs/, reportedly accomplishes
- the same thing without requiring a disc swap.
-
- If this doesn't work, there is an (unconfirmed) report that a UV EPROM
- eraser will do the trick. Experiments have shown that leaving the disc
- out in direct sunlight for a couple of hours may also help. The resulting
- disc won't be fully erased, but it may be "blank enough" that you can
- then use Super Blank to finish the job. (Somebody else has reported that
- polycarbonate is opaque to UV light, suggesting that the discs should be
- left label-side-up if this is to work at all.)
-
- If nothing at all works, make a careful examination of the write surface
- of the disc. It's possible the disc is physically damaged and can't be
- used.
-
-
- Subject: [4-28] Having trouble formatting discs with DirectCD
- (2001/07/09)
-
- First off, see section (3-40) for an explanation of the different ways to
- make a disc look empty. For conventional CD recording, you don't want
- to format the disc at all.
-
- If it's a CD-RW that you've used before, try erasing it first. If you
- can't seem to do that either, see section (4-27).
-
- One user with DirectCD 5.01 had troubles that went away by changing the
- VCACHE settings from min=2048 max=6144 to min=0 max=10240. See section
- (4-1-2) for information about the surprisingly important VCACHE settings.
-
- It has been reported that some virus scanners, notably TBAV, can interfere
- with the format process and should be disabled.
-
-
- This was sent to me by Jac Goudsmit, regarding formatting CD-RW media
- with DirectCD for Windows 2.0a:
-
- "When [Roxio] DirectCD refuses to format a CD-RW for packet-writing, it's
- possible that the disc is not completely blank. This may happen because you
- chose the "quick" option when you last erased it. The quick-erase option
- only erases the lead-in area to make the hardware and software think the
- disc is empty. This is fine if you're going to use the disc for "normal"
- writing as a CD-ROM, audio disc or whatever.
-
- The packet-writing formatter in DirectCD 2.0a however (apparently) requires
- the disc to be totally empty, so you really have to do a full erase if the
- disc contained data previously.
-
- BUT: there's another problem: after you do a full erase and shut down the
- program you erase with (e.g. EasyCD Pro or Easy CD Creator) it's possible
- that the DirectCD program won't recognize the disc as valid media, and you
- still won't be able to format it, until you restart the computer.
-
- Unfortunately this means that if you want to start using a previously
- recorded CD-RW for packet writing, you'll have to wait a total time of at
- least an hour and a half for the erase and format to complete..."
-
-
- Subject: [4-29] I can't write CD-Rs after installing Windows 98
- (1998/07/07)
-
- (Many users had trouble with Win98 shortly after it was released. These
- problems can still arise if you re-install the original Win98.)
-
- If you're using Easy CD Creator 3, try uninstalling it, rebooting, and
- then reinstalling it. This seems to fix the problems for the people
- reporting them. Doing the same for other software may have similar
- beneficial effects. Apparently ECDC3 installs its own versions of some
- system drivers (e.g. ASPI), which get overwritten when Win98 is installed.
- Uninstalling and reinstalling the drivers puts the ECDC3-friendly versions
- back.
-
- Make sure your ASPI (Advanced SCSI Programmer's Interface) layer is up to
- date, even if you have an IDE recorder. See section (4-44).
-
-
- Subject: [4-30] I can't use the copy of a CD-ROM after installing Windows 98
- (1998/09/14)
-
- (This refers to systems upgraded from Win95 to Win98.)
-
- This problem has been recognized by Microsoft. The resolution is posted on
- http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q186/2/97.asp.
-
- The basic problem is that, after upgrading to Windows 98, copies of some
- CD-ROMs (usually copy-protected games) will refuse to run, insisting that
- you insert the original disc. Microsoft has recommended two methods for
- resolving this issue. The first is to simply use the original disc.
-
- The second recommendation is to make a new copy of the disc under Win98.
- Why this works is unclear, and the Microsoft support pages aren't much
- help. They only say that the behavior is not caused by a bug, but rather
- "design changes in Windows 98". (It appears that using Win98 to write a
- new session onto an existing disc will also cure the problem, but if you
- aren't in the habit of leaving a new session open on copies of game discs,
- this won't help you much.)
-
- One possibility is that Win98 returns a value for the volume label that is
- closer to what is actually stored (perhaps there was some sort of character
- set conversion or truncation going on in Win95). Copy protected games
- often check the volume label as a way of obstructing inexperienced software
- pirates.
-
-
- Subject: [4-31] The disc I was writing with DirectCD is now unreadable
- (1999/03/12)
-
- Start with http://www.mrichter.com/cdr/primer/udf.htm to get an
- understanding of what DirectCD is doing.
-
- A popular way to screw up DirectCD's UDF handling is to remove the disc
- without letting the software finish up. You can accomplish this by rebooting
- while it's working, attempting to disable it by doing something other
- than uninstalling it (see section (3-45)), or by turning off auto-insert
- notification.
-
- If you have DirectCD 2.x, you may be able to recover the data with the
- included Scan Disc utility. CD-R Diagnostic (6-2-6) may also be able
- to recover data.
-
- Rule of thumb: don't delete data off your hard drive until the disc is
- finalized and verified readable. Too many bad things can happen when
- writing to a disc.
-
-
- Subject: [4-32] I'm getting a message about 100 form transitions
- (2000/05/05)
-
- When attempting to copy certain discs, Easy CD Creator (as of v3.x) will
- say something like:
-
- "The current track contains more than 100 form transitions. Easy CD
- Creator cannot handle more than 100 form transitions on a single track.
- The disc cannot be copied."
-
- This appears to be a form of copy protection, where a disc uses both FORM-1
- and FORM-2 on a CDROM/XA MODE-2 disc.
-
- One user reported that this only happens when trying to copy a Playstation
- game by first copying the tracks to the hard drive. If you make a copy
- directly from one disc to the other, the errors won't occur.
-
- According to Roxio, the message can also occur if the source drive is
- reporting more than 100 tracks on the disc, or if the source drive is
- defective in some specific way.
-
-
- Subject: [4-33] My system hangs when I insert a blank disc
- (1999/10/10)
-
- You may have a bad installation of a CD recording program like DirectCD.
- When you insert a blank disc, the software tries to identify it to give
- you the opportunity to format it for packet writing.
-
- If you have packet software like DirectCD or PacketCD installed, try
- uninstalling it and see if the problem goes away. In some cases you
- might need to get rid of windows\system\iosubsys\scsi1hlp.vxd manually.
-
-
- Subject: [4-34] My CD-R discs don't work in my DVD player
- (2000/02/06)
-
- Not all DVD players can handle CD-R media. See section (2-13).
-
- Some players that don't work with CD-R discs will work with CD-RW discs.
- If you're having trouble, try CD-RW media instead.
-
-
- Subject: [4-35] I need help recovering data from a CD-ROM
- (2004/03/05)
-
- Some diagnostic and recovery software is availabile:
-
- - CD-R Diagnostic (6-2-6)
- - IsoBuster (6-2-20)
- - CD Data Rescue (6-2-22)
- - BadCopy Pro (6-2-23)
- - CDRoller (6-2-24)
-
- If these can't help you, there are data recovery companies that might be
- able to. Some examples:
-
- - CD Recovery Services, http://www.cdrecovery.com/.
- - Acodisc CD Data Recovery, http://www.acodisc.com/.
- - CD Data Guys, http://www.cddataguys.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [4-36] What does "not convertible to CD quality" mean?
- (2000/03/12)
-
- Some applications, notably Easy CD Creator, can only do very simple
- conversions on audio files. If you are trying to create an audio CD,
- but the WAV file isn't 44.1KHz 16-bit stereo PCM, you will have to convert
- it to that format with something like GoldWave (section (6-2-21)) before
- you do the write.
-
-
- Subject: [4-37] I inserted a CD-ROM but Windows thinks it's an audio CD
- (2002/03/18)
-
- Sometimes a Windows system will get into a state where it thinks that a
- CD-R or CD-RW data disc is an audio CD. This is very peculiar, since the
- CD-ROMs aren't "enhanced" discs with both audio and data content. In some
- cases the problem only happens with a CD recorder -- a CD-ROM drive in the
- same machine will work correctly -- or vice-versa.
-
- One situation where this is reported to occur is with a JVC XR-W2080 with
- v2.06 firmware (or an equivalent OEM version). If you have the Roxio UDF
- reader loaded, whether manually or as part of installing DirectCD 3.x, the
- problem will occur. Removing the UDF reader, either with Add/Remove Programs
- or renaming \Windows\System\Iosubsys\Udfreadr.vxd, is said to fix the problem.
-
- Another occurrence has been reported with Toast 3.7 on a Mac. If a disc
- was recorded with Toast as CD-ROM/XA instead of CD-ROM, Win98 would see
- the disc as audio. Win95 and WinNT worked fine on the same disc.
-
- One user found that replacing the IDE cable made the problem go away.
- Another found that using MODE-1 rather than MODE-2 helped (check the
- advanced recording options in your software).
-
- Another user got the problem to go away by uninstalling "Wavelab".
-
- Somebody else found that the problem went away on a SCSI device when
- he disabled wide negotiation and limited the data rate to 16MB/sec.
-
-
- Subject: [4-38] I get read errors when trying to copy a game
- (2000/04/17)
-
- You are most likely running into copy protection. The game publisher has
- placed "unreadable" sectors on the disc, in an effort to confound disc
- duplication programs.
-
- Instructions for making "backups" of copy-protected games can be found
- on the web. See also section (3-39).
-
- If you don't believe the disc is protected, then it might simply be dirty
- or scratched. You can try to clean the disc -- use a lint-free cloth,
- wiping from the center out -- or see section (7-12) for notes on scratch
- removal.
-
-
- Subject: [4-39] Restarting or shutting Windows down after recording causes hang
- (2000/04/26)
-
- This is a situation where recording discs proceeds without difficulty, but
- the system hangs when you tell it to halt or restart. One possible culprit
- is anti-virus software. Try disabling it and see if the problem goes away.
-
-
- Subject: [4-40] Why do CD-Rs play poorly when anti-skip protection is enabled?
- (2004/02/20)
-
- When a CD player is playing a disc without any sort of anti-skip protection,
- it spins the disc at 1x, and attempts to correct whatever errors it gets.
- If it can't correct them, it does the best it can and keeps going.
-
- When an anti-skip feature (such as Sony's "ESP") is in use, the disc is
- played at a faster speed (perhaps 2x), and when uncorrectable errors are
- encountered, the failed section is re-read. Because it's reading faster
- than it's playing, the player occasionally has to stop reading and wait for
- the player to catch up. Because the disc is still spinning, this requires
- seeking back along the spiral track to the point where the player left off.
- A common symptom of media incompatibility is trouble seeking between tracks,
- so the need for frequent seeking magnifies any problems that the player
- is having with the disc.
-
- The skip protection feature can usually be turned off on portables. On
- car players you may have to find a brand of media that works better.
-
-
- Subject: [4-41] I'm having trouble recording under Windows 2000 or WinXP
- (2003/04/23)
-
- Make sure the software you're using supports Win2K or WinXP. Don't assume
- that, just because it runs, everything will work correctly. You may need
- to update to a newer version.
-
- Under Win2K, you may need to be running as an Administrator equivalent
- to record. The reasons for this appear to be access permissions on the
- device, on certain registry keys, or both. Similar problems may arise
- under WinXP.
-
- Installing Windows Media Player 7 in Win2K may mess up Easy CD Creator
- and DirectCD. One solution is to uninstall and reinstall both, and make
- sure ECDC is at 4.02c or later and DirectCD is at 3.01c or later. A simpler
- solution involves a registry fix. For a complete discussion of the problem,
- go to http://ask.adaptec.com/, and in the "Search all Products by Keyword
- or Article Number" section enter "000726-0003", click on "Article #",
- and press the "search" button.
-
- IDE recorders may need to be the master device when used with ECDC under
- Win2K. If you are having trouble with an IDE recorder, and it's not set
- up as the secondary master, try configuring it that way.
-
- Running ECDC v3.5c under Win2K is not recommended. Only Version 4.02 and
- later are officially supported. For WinXP, you need version 5, and even
- then you'll probably have trouble. See also section (4-49).
-
- Installing WinXP Service Pack 1 may cause problems with DirectCD. The
- solution is to uninstall and re-install DirectCD after installing the
- WinXP SP1 update.
-
- A few people were able to fix problems by disabling the in-built CD
- recording features of WinXP. This can be turned off for each drive by
- right-clicking on the drive in My Computer, selecting Properties, then
- clicking on the Recording tab and disabling the appropriate checkbox.
- A more thorough approach is to open the "Administrative Tools" control
- panel and disable the "IMAPI Burning Service".
-
- See also Microsoft Knowledge Base article #324129, "HOW TO: Troubleshoot
- Issues That Occur When You Write Data to a CD-R or CD-RW Optical Disc in
- Windows XP", at http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=kb;en-us;324129.
-
-
- Subject: [4-42] I formatted a CD-RW and only have about 530MB free
- (2000/10/29)
-
- This is the expected behavior when formatting CD-RW media for use with
- Roxio's DirectCD packet-writing software. CD-RW discs are formatted
- with fixed-size packets, which takes up more space but allows you to
- erase individual files. With variable-size packets, you get to use more
- of the space on the disc, but when you delete a file it is simply marked
- as gone. The space is still in use.
-
- To use variable-size packets on a CD-RW with DirectCD, format a CD-R with
- DirectCD and then do an image copy from the CD-R to the CD-RW.
-
- Packet writing programs from other companies may work differently.
-
- Don't forget that it is only necessary to format a disc if you want
- drive-letter access. Conventional pre-mastering and creation of audio CDs
- should be done on unformatted discs. See section (3-40).
-
-
- Subject: [4-43] My CD recording software keeps crashing
- (2000/10/29)
-
- There are many possible reasons for this. Most people are quick to blame
- the software, but sometimes the problem is elsewhere in their system.
-
- First things first: make sure you have the latest version of the software
- that is available. Perhaps you have found a bug that has already been
- fixed.
-
- If you have overclocked your system, or tweaked it in a way that gains
- performance at the expense of reliability, un-tweak it and try again.
-
- Under Windows, make sure your ASPI layer is up to date. See (4-44).
-
- Also under Windows, look for \Windows\System\Iosubsys\scsi1hlp.vxd.
- If it's there, rename it to "scsi1hlp.vx_", so it won't get loaded.
- Reboot and try again. (This file is required for compatibility with some
- old SCSI hard drives. Occasionally it can intefere with other things.)
-
- If your system looks good, contact the appropriate customer support center.
- If you bought the software retail, contact the company who developed the
- software. If it came with something else, and was distributed as an "OEM"
- version, you may need to contact the vendor you got it from instead (see
- section (6-8) for an explanation).
-
-
- Subject: [4-44] Do I need to update my ASPI layer?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.mrichter.com/cdr/primer/aspi.htm for an introduction to ASPI.
-
- Many people have solved problems by updating their ASPI layer. In the
- past, it has been the first thing that customer service would ask you
- to check. Adaptec makes it easy with a program called ASPICHK, which used
- to be available from http://www.adaptec.com/support/faqs/aspilayer.html.
- It seems to be gone now, but http://www.mukappa.com/ had copies available
- under "Tools --> ASPI tools".
-
- At any rate, according to Roxio, as of version 4.02 of Easy CD Creator
- (ECDC), the ASPI layer is no longer used by their product. The necessary
- bits are included in the application, so there's no need to check or
- update the layer.
-
- For non-Adaptec owners, there is a program (of questionable legality)
- called "ForceASPI" that forces the Adaptec ASPI layer to install. Usually
- Adaptec will ask sites to remove it, so it's a bit of a moving target.
- http://www.mindspring.com/~tburke1/aspi.htm had a list of active sites,
- and it can occasionally be found with a Google search. You can also try
- http://aspi.radified.com/.
-
- Some other software uses and/or modifies ASPI -- poorly. Known examples
- are some USB SmartMedia readers and the Creative Labs Infra system.
- Updating the ASPI layer when one of these devices is present may be unwise.
-
- It's unclear what interactions Windows ME has with ASPI.
-
- As of September 2001, the Adaptec ASPI layer causes problems on Win2K and
- should not be used. The LSI "w2kaspi" layer may work better; it can be
- found at http://www.lsilogic.com/support/support+drivers/scsi/w2kaspi.html.
- [At last check, the links in the page were broken.] WinXP may have
- similar problems.
-
-
- Subject: [4-45] The write process completes, but the disc is still blank
- (2001/09/17)
-
- This problem has been reported by a number of people. The cause is
- unclear. This has been known to happen suddenly to otherwise fully
- functional CD recorders.
-
- Models where this has been seen:
-
- - Smart & Friendly 2224
- - HP 9710
-
- If this happens to you:
-
- - Have you changed media recently? Perhaps your recorder doesn't
- like the new blanks.
- - Have you "upgraded" operating systems recently? Could be an OS
- issue.
- - Try at least one other piece of software (e.g. a demo version of
- Nero or CDRWIN) just to see if something broke the software.
-
-
- Subject: [4-46] My CD-RW drive doesn't work with my CD-RW blanks
- (2004/01/23)
-
- If the disc is recognized but won't erase or format, see section (4-27).
-
- One possible source of difficulty is there are different blanks for
- "slow" recorders (1x - 4x), "high speed" recorders (4x-10x), "ultra speed"
- recorders (12x-24x), and "ultra speed +" recorders. The disc manufacturers
- had to change the way the discs were made to accommodate each successive
- improvement, so older recorders don't work with the newer disks.
-
- It is possible for some 4x-capable "slow" drives to use the "fast" blanks
- with a firmware upgrade, but there is no advantage to doing so since you're
- still limited to 4x recording (unless, of course, you're unable to find
- "slow" CD-RW blanks).
-
- CD-RW discs for the faster drives are labeled with a "High Speed",
- "Ultra Speed", or "Ultra Speed +" logos. Make sure you buy the right blanks
- for your drive.
-
- A press release for Verbatim's Ultra Speed + 32x CD-RW discs is available
- from http://www.eetimes.com/pressreleases/bizwire/97782.
-
-
- Subject: [4-47] Audio discs have crackling sounds on the last few tracks
- (2002/08/06)
-
- A not-uncommon complaint is:
-
- "I've made lots of audio CDs. They sound fine in my computer or home
- CD player, but when I put them in the car they have lots of static."
-
- A variation on the theme:
-
- "...the static is only on the last few tracks."
-
- Or, more rarely:
-
- "...the discs sounded fine for a couple of weeks, and still sound fine
- on most players, but they sound really bad now in the car. The more I
- played them the worse it got, to a point."
-
- There are a few things going on here. First and foremost is media
- compatibility. The combination of recorder, player, and media just
- isn't working. Unless you're willing to change your player, the easiest
- thing to do is change the brand of media you're using.
-
- The reason tracks out past the N minute mark (typically 40) sound worse
- might be due to speed changes. For 1x audio playback the player is in CLV
- mode, so the disc is spinning more slowly near the outside of the disc.
- (You'd think that'd make it easier, not harder. Go figure.)
-
- You should make sure that it's a problem with writing and not with reading
- tracks near the edge. Try writing the tracks in a different order. A good
- way to do this is to extract the tracks into WAV files with a reliable DAE
- program (EAC, from section (6-2-12), works well). Play them from the hard
- drive to make sure they extracted well, and then record them onto two CD-Rs,
- using a different track order for each. If the problem is always on the
- last track then the disc is being recorded poorly.
-
- The slight deterioration of the media after being played a few times
- isn't expected, but does seem to happen with some discs. It appears that
- the compatibility between the discs and the player is marginal to begin
- with, so a slight degredation in error rate on the disc results in a
- dramatic increase in noise during playback.
-
-
- Subject: [4-48] Files in deep directories can be seen but not opened
- (2001/10/25)
-
- The ISO-9660 standard allows discs with directories nested 8 deep. If
- you try to go deeper than that, you may have trouble reading the files.
- Win2K and WinNT4 seem to work, but Win98SE doesn't.
-
- Programs like "mkisofs" can use the Rock Ridge extensions to work around
- the problem. Directories are "re-rooted" at a higher level, and invisible
- links are created from the deeper directories. Unfortunately, Windows
- still doesn't support Rock Ridge.
-
- The UDF format, used by packet writing applications, may (?) allow
- deeper directories. However, not all systems can read UDF discs.
-
-
- Subject: [4-49] My CD-ROM drive stopped working after uninstalling software
- (2002/06/27)
-
- There is a problem with Roxio DirectCD 3.01/3.01c and Roxio Easy CD Creator
- version 4.02c and 5.01. If you uninstall them from WinXP or Win2K, your
- CD-ROM drive may stop working. It appears that VOB InstantCD/DVD and
- Nero InCD can have the same effect.
-
- Any CD-ROM drives will be inaccessible from My Computer, and the device
- manager will show a "code 31", "code 32", or perhaps "code 19" message
- for the drives.
-
- The page at http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q270/0/08.ASP
- describes the symptoms and the resolution of the problem.
-
-
- Subject: [4-50] Audio CDs recorded from MP3s play back fast and high-pitched
- (2002/01/17)
-
- Somebody described this as listening to songs recorded by Alvin and the
- Chipmunks. What's happening is the software used to uncompress the MP3
- files is doing a poor job, and the uncompressed data is effectively being
- recorded at a lower sample rate. When the CD player tries to play it
- back at 44.1KHz, it sounds like the artists are inhaling a crude mixture
- of amphetamines and helium.
-
- This has been reported with Easy CD Creator v4.05 and v5, NTI CD Maker 2000+,
- and something called Orion Liquid Burn.
-
- The work-around is to expand the MP3 files into 44.1KHz 16-bit stereo PCM
- WAV files on your hard drive, and record from those instead of from the
- MP3s. By using a decoder such as WinAmp (http://www.winamp.com/)
-
-
- Subject: [4-51] Windows says access denied, can't create or replace file
- (2003/04/23)
-
- Sometimes, when trying to copy files onto a disc from Windows explorer, you
- get a message to the effect that it can't create or replace a file because
- access is denied or the disc is full. Some not-so-helpful suggestions about
- checking write protection and making sure the file is not in use are offered.
-
- This most often happens when trying to use DirectCD with an unformatted disc.
- A common way to cause this is to disable the DirectCD user interface
- with msconfig or a similar utility (a mistake -- see section (3-45)),
- which prevents the "do you want to format this disc" dialog from coming up.
-
- The solution is to let DirectCD format the disc. If you don't see the CD
- icon in the system tray (usually the lower-right corner), you will need to
- re-enable it. Under Win98, click on the Start button, select "Run...", type
- "msconfig", and click "OK" to bring up the System Configuration Utility.
- Now click on the Startup tab and make sure that anything with the word
- "DirectCD" in it is enabled. Under Win2K, click on Start, Settings, Control
- Panels, Administrative Tools, then Computer Management. When the program
- opens, in the left-hand pane click on System Tools, System Information,
- Software Environment, then Startup Programs, and make sure DirectCD
- is present. If not, you may need to re-install.
-
- If the above doesn't seem to help, or you're not using DirectCD, you
- may be able to manually format a disc. How you do this depends on what
- software you're using. For example, HP DLA has a utility available from
- their CD recording application that lets you format a disc or close it to
- ISO-9660 format.
-
- See section (3-40) for more information on formatting CD-R and CD-RW media.
-
-
- In some rare cases, after formatting a CD-R or CD-RW disc for packet writing,
- Windows still claims the disc is full when you try to copy files onto it,
- or complains that the disc is "locked or protected". This can happen
- after files have already been copied onto the disc.
-
- This error message can apparently also occur when trying to copy files
- *from* a CD-RW that has been previously written to.
-
- The problem is rare and isn't well understood. It has been reported with
- DirectCD 3.x (part of ECDC Deluxe 5.x) under Windows XP. Another instance
- of "locked or protected" was reported under Win98. In any event, start
- by checking the "msconfig" situation described above. This *might* also
- be a media compatibility issue, so if it happens it might be worthwhile
- to try different brands of media.
-
- If the disc was closed to ISO-9660 format, you will need to reopen it.
-
-
- Subject: [4-52] I can't see any files on a CD-R or CD-RW from MS-DOS
- (2002/05/08)
-
- If the disc was created with a packet writing program (like DirectCD
- or HP DLA), it will either be in UDF or ISO-9660 Level 3 format. Either
- way, you're not going to be able to see files on the disc from DOS.
- You need to use a more modern OS, such as Windows or Linux, or create
- the disc with a conventional premastering application like Nero.
-
- Some backup programs, such as Symantec Ghost, use packet writing when
- backing up to CD-R. The software runs under DOS, but uses a special driver
- to create and access the backup data. You can see the files from Windows,
- but won't be able to get at them from DOS.
-
-
- Subject: [4-53] My OS doesn't support ISO-13346 "UDF"
- (2004/03/03)
-
- The UDF filesystem is based on the ISO/IEC 13346 standard, now ECMA-167,
- and remains compliant to that standard. Anything that knows how to read
- discs conforming to ISO-13346 should be able to read UDF discs.
-
- When some Windows owners have inserted an older disc written with UDF
- (using one of the drag-and-drop approaches like DirectCD, InCD, or HP DLA)
- they received a message like this:
-
- "This disc contains a "UDF" file system and requires an operating system
- that supports the ISO-13346 "UDF" file system specification."
-
- This seems to be happening primarily with CD-RW media. It's not really
- clear what's going on.
-
- In theory, installing a UDF reader will solve the problem. Recent versions
- of Windows come with UDF support, so it shouldn't be necessary to do
- anything to get the disc to work. However, the problems persist.
-
- One possibility is that the disc isn't using a quite standard version of
- UDF, and the reader is having difficulty. Installing the software that
- created the disc in the first place will help.
-
- When exchanging data, "closing" the disc to ISO-9660 format can help avoid
- these difficulties.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: [5] Hardware
- (2002/10/15)
-
- The numbers after the model name (e.g. "CDR-102 (4x2/512K)") refer to the
- read and write speeds of the unit and the size of the write buffer. "4x2"
- would be a double-speed writer that's also a quad-speed reader. If it just
- says "?x2", the write speed is double-speed and the read speed isn't known
- (but presumably is at least 2x). Buffer sizes written with a '+', e.g.
- "2MB+", indicate that the buffer can be expanded further.
-
- If the recorder can write to CD-RW media, the specification will include a
- third value, e.g. "6x4x2/1MB" would be a drive that reads at 6x, writes to
- CD-R media at 4x, and writes to CD-RW media at 2x.
-
- Some manufacturers present the speed ratings in a different order, often
- write/rewrite/read. Some drives that support reading of DVD-ROM will
- be written write/rewrite/read/dvd-read. There is no standard approach.
-
- Many units are repackaged versions of other manufacturer's devices,
- sometimes with slight changes in the firmware. Value-added retailers have
- been known to switch to a different manufacturer's drive without notice, so
- don't assume that everything here is accurate.
-
- The interface is listed for each drive. "SCSI" means any form of SCSI
- (SCSI-2, SCSI-3, wide, narrow, ultra, etc). IDE means any ATAPI interface
- (e.g. Ultra-DMA/33). USB (1.x or 2.x), parallel-port, FireWire, and PCMCIA
- refer to interface styles for external drives (which are usually just
- internal ATAPI devices placed inside an enclosure with a power supply
- and an ATAPI converter).
-
- Many of the models listed have been discontinued in favor of newer models,
- and some of them have yet to be released, so you will probably not be able
- to find all of the models listed here for sale.
-
- If you're new to SCSI, take a look at the comp.periphs.scsi FAQ,
- http://www.faqs.org/faqs/scsi-faq. It covers both novice and advanced
- questions. If you want specs, try http://www.t10.org/.
-
- A wealth of information on Enhanced IDE and other storage technologies
- is available from http://thef-nym.sci.kun.nl/~pieterh/storage.html
- and http://www.faqs.org/faqs/pc-hardware-faq/enhanced-IDE/part1/.
- If you want to debate the merits of SCSI vs EIDE, please read
- http://thef-nym.sci.kun.nl/~pieterh/eide-vs-scsi.html.
-
- Some brief notes: ATA (AT Attachment Interface) is the official name
- for IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) interfaces. ATAPI is the ATA
- Packet Interface, commonly used for controlling CD-ROM and tape devices.
- The ATA-2 changes grew out of vendor-specific "Enhanced IDE" implementations.
- There have been subsequent enhancements (ATA-3, ATA/ATAPI-4, etc).
-
-
- Subject: [5-1] Which CD recorder should I buy?
- (2001/11/29)
-
- There are no absolutely perfect recorders, but some drives are better than
- others. The best are listed below, and the risky propositions are
- identified with "CAVEAT EMPTOR" warnings in the individual sections. In
- cases where a unit is built by company A and repackaged by company B, the
- warnings are listed with the original manufacturer (company A).
-
- http://www.storagereview.com/ has links to reviews of storage devices,
- including CD recorders. http://www.cdrlabs.com/ has reviews of both
- hardware and software products.
-
- This section used to list specific models that were highly regarded.
- The manufacturers are coming out with new models so quickly that it's
- impossible to keep up in an FAQ that is updated monthly. The list of
- older models is below. See section (8-4) for a list of sites that carry
- news articles about newly released products.
-
- As of late 2001, the most commonly recommended manufacturers (in no
- particular order) were:
-
- - Plextor (5-1-21)
- - Sony (5-1-2)
- - Yamaha (5-1-1)
-
- Many manufacturers resell the units made by these companies. In some
- cases the reseller will do nothing more than change the decal on the
- front, in others they may rewrite the firmware.
-
- If you have specific needs, you should verify with the manufacturer that
- the drive will do what you want. All computer-based recorders can create
- audio CDs and CD-ROMs, but some have additional features and some are just
- plain better at it. If you want a drive that works well with a specific
- piece of software, e.g. CloneCD (6-1-49), then you should check the web
- page for that software to see which drives they recommend.
-
- Some older models that would be worth having are listed below. As of
- October 2001 this list is no longer being updated.
-
- - HP 9700
- - HP 9900
- - Sony CRX1600L
- - Yamaha CRW2200
- - Sony CRX160E (often as HP 9500/9600)
- - Plextor PX-W1610TA
- - Sanyo CRD-BP1400P
- - Teac CD-W512E
- - Yamaha CRW8824
- - Yamaha CRW2100
- - Plextor PX-W1210T
- - Plextor PX-W124TS
- - Ricoh MP-9060A
- - Sony CRX145E (often as HP 9300i)
- - Sony CRX140E (often as HP 9100/9200)
- - Ricoh MP-8040SE
- - Ricoh MP-7060
- - Plextor PX-R820T
- - Plextor PX-W8220T
- - Plextor PX-R412C
- - Yamaha CRW-8424S
- - Yamaha CRW-6416S
- - Sony CRX120E (often as HP 8200i)
- - Sony CRX100E (often as HP 8100i)
- - Sony 948S
- - Teac CD-R56S
- - Panasonic CW-7501/CW-7502/CW-7582 (often as Matsushita or Compro 7502)
- - Sanyo CRD-R800S (often as Smart & Friendly CD Rocket 8020)
- - Ricoh MP-7040A
- - Ricoh MP-6200/MP-6200I/MP-6201S (also as Philips OmniWriter/26 and /26A)
- - JVC XR-W4080 (also as Creative CDR4224)
- - Goldstar CED-8042B
- - Philips CDRW404
- - Yamaha CRW-4416
- - Yamaha CDR-100/CDR-102 (also as S&F 4000/S&F 1004)
- - Sony 920S/940S (also as S&F 1002/2004)
- - Teac CD-R55S
- - Teac CD-R50S (a/k/a Teac 4x4)
- - Philips CDD3600 (also as HP 7100/7200)
- - Yamaha CRW-4001/CRW-4260 (also as Smart & Friendly 426) and CRW-2260
- - Wearnes CDRW-622 (also as Memorex CRW-1622 and Dysan CRW-1622)
- - Ricoh RS-1420C (also as Turtle Beach 2040R)
- - Philips CDD2600 (also as HP 6020i, but w/o packet writing)
- - Philips CDD522 (also as Kodak PCD225)
-
- Computer-attached recorders are discussed in the next few sections.
- Stand-alone audio recorders are discussed in section (5-12).
-
- The model numbers are important! Sometimes the older or newer models from
- the same manufacturer aren't as good. The units listed were considered
- independently from the software that they were bundled with, and it may be
- necessary to buy additional software to get the full value from the drive.
-
- External drives were traditionally preferred to internal drives because
- of heat problems, but this is only a minor concern for current models.
- External models do have the advantage that they can be moved between
- machines, and even between platforms. Most if not all SCSI models will
- work on both Macs and PCs, as should USB recorders.
-
- I'm not currently listing stand-alone recorders like the "CD Blaster" or
- "CD Dupe-It", which are boxes with a CPU, CD-R, and hard drive that can
- duplicate CDs without tying up a full machine. Most of these low-end CD
- production boxes are off-the-shelf hardware and software packaged into a
- single unit, so listing them separately doesn't make much sense. Besides,
- they're not of much interest to the average user. Interested users can
- find some relevant URLs in (5-19).
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-1] Yamaha
- (2003/03/25)
-
- See http://www.yamaha.com/yec/multimedia/products/cdrw1.html
- See http://yamaha-it.de/ (was http://www.yamaha-yste.com/)
-
- Models are:
- CDR-100 (4x4/512K;SCSI)
- CDR-102 (4x2/512K;SCSI)
- CDR-200 (6x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CDR-400 (6x4/2MB;SCSI; 'c' is caddy, 't' is tray, 'x' is external)
- CDR-401 (6x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRW-4001 (6x4x2/2MB;IDE)
- CRW-2260 (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CRW-4260 (6x4x2/2MB;SCSI)
- CRW-2216E (16x2x2/2MB;IDE)
- CRW-4416 (16x4x4/2MB; 'S'=SCSI, 'E'=IDE)
- CRW-6416S (16x6x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CRW-8424S (24x8x4/4MB;SCSI)
- CRW-8824 (24x8x8/4MB; 'S'=SCSI, 'E'=IDE, 'F'=Firewire, 'X'=external)
- CRW-70 (24x12x8/8MB;USB)
- CRW-2100 (40x16x10/8MB; 'S'=SCSI-int, 'SX'=SCSI-ext, 'E'=IDE, 'IX'=Firewire)
- CRW-2200E (40x20x10/8MB; 'SX'=SCSI-ext, 'E'=IDE, 'IX'=FireWire, 'UX'=USB)
- CRW-3200 (40x24x10/8MB; 'SX'=SCSI-ext, 'E'=IDE, 'IX'=FireWire, 'UX'=USB)
- CRW-F1 (44x44x24/8MB)
-
- [ Yamaha departed the optical storage market in February 2003. ]
-
- It has been reported that the CDR-102 is the same mechanism as the CDR-100,
- but with the 4x writing feature disabled. There is no known way to convert
- it into a 4x writer. Similar speculation has been made about the CDR-200
- and CDR-400, and in fact some people have claimed success. Learn all about
- R621 at http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Bay/7023/index.html (or
- http://home.t-online.de/home/christoph.dittenberger if you prefer German).
- It may also be possible to convert a 2260 into a 4260 with the same method,
- as well as the 2216 into a 4416.
-
- Yamaha CDR-100 and CDR-102 units have problems doing digital audio
- extraction on some discs. See section (4-19).
-
- Yamaha CDR-100s with firmware version 1.08 may experience problems when
- recording audio (e.g. a click at the end of tracks recorded with the "copy
- prohibit" flag set to "off"). Upgrading to version 1.10 is recommended.
- Since the CDR-100 and CDR-102 units don't have flash ROM (and apparently
- the upgrade involves more than just changing a ROM chip), the drive needs
- to be sent back to the dealer for the upgrade.
-
- The CDR-100 reportedly works best when writing in 4x mode, and may produce
- poor results when used to write at 2x or 1x.
-
- The current firmware versions for the older Yamaha drives is v1.12 for the
- CDR-100 and v1.01 for the CDR-102. The change was to "allow mastering in
- Blue Book specs". If you aren't having problems, don't get the upgrade.
- The Yamaha CDR-400 is somewhere around 1.0g.
-
- The CDR-400 is flash upgradeable, and supports packet writing. The tray on
- the CDR-400 has been described as "flimsy". The tray eject moves quickly
- for the first half and then slows considerably; this is normal.
-
- The CRW-4001/CRW-4260 runs rather hot. External units or extra cooling
- fans are recommended.
-
- Some older Yamaha models apparently don't do disc-at-once recording.
- However, they will do session-at-once (SAO), which is as useful for
- most things and essential for multisession mixed audio and data discs.
- With the right software this isn't a problem.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - Yamaha CDR-200/CDR-400. Reports of units breaking down
- after a few months have been persistent. It appears that, unless the units
- are kept well-cooled, they will start rejecting discs after a month or two
- of use. The drives work very well otherwise, and one customer was told
- that the CDR-400AT model was a sturdier version.
-
- (It may be possible to fix the drive by tightening some screws and
- adjusting some poorly-seated heat sinks on chips.)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-2] Sony
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.storagebysony.com/
- See http://www.sonyisstorage.com/
- See http://www.sonyburners.com/
- See http://www.sonystyle.com/
-
- Models are:
- CDW-900E (2x2/3MB:SCSI)
- CDU920S (2x2/1MB:SCSI)
- CDU940S (4x2/1MB:SCSI)
- CDU926S (6x2/512K:SCSI)
- CDU928E (8x2/512K;IDE)
- CDU948S (8x4/2MB:SCSI)
- CRX100E/CH (24x4x2/1MB;IDE) and CRX100E/X (6x4x2/1MB;USB)
- CRX120E (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRX120? (24x4x4/2MB;FireWire)
- CRXP-90MU (24x24x10/8MB;USB2.0, also reads DVDx8, portable)
- CRX140E/CH (32x8x4/4MB;IDE)
- CRX145E/CH (32x10x4/4MB;IDE)
- CRX160E (32x12x8/4MB;IDE)
- CRX1600L "i.LINK" (32x12x8/4MB;FireWire)
- CRX1611/82U (40x16x10/8MB;IDE)
- CRX168B/A1 (40x16x10/8MB;IDE)
- CRX175A/A1 (40x24x10/2MB;IDE, /A2 is USB)
- CRX200E/A1 (32x12x8/8MB;IDE;DD-R)
- DRX120A (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, DRX120L is ext. FireWire, also writes DVD+R/RW)
- DRU128A (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, also writes DVD+R/RW)
- DRU500A (32x24x10/8MB;IDE, also writes DVD+R/RW and DVD-R/RW)
- DRU510A (32x16x8/8MB;IDE, also writes DVD+R/RW and DVD-R/RW; UL is USB2.0)
- CRX195A1 (48x40x12/2MB;IDE, CRX1950U is external USB2.0)
- CRX210A1 (48x48x12/2MB;IDE, CRX2100U is external USB2.0)
- CRX215A1 (48x48x24/2MB;IDE)
- MPD-AP20U (24x24x10/?MB;USB2.0/1.1, also reads DVDx8 and plays DVD to TV)
- CRX220A1 (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- CRX225A (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- CRX300A (48x48x24/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
-
- The CDW-900E has a separate connector that allows multiple "slave" drives
- to be daisy-chained, allowing multiple CD-Rs to be written in parallel.
-
- The Spressa 9211 is a 920 in an external case, the 9411 is a 940 in an
- external case, and the 9611 is a 926. The 940S drive is actually a 924S;
- the 940S designation refers to the complete bundle (software, cables, etc).
- Looks like each unit can be referenced by three different numbers.
-
- Some people have criticized the CRX100E for being unable to write more than
- about 78 minutes on an oversized (e.g. 80-minute) blank, and being unable
- to "overburn" a disc without resorting to swap tricks. It appears that
- firmware v1.0n removes this limitation.
-
- Some older Sony drives have a special "recover" feature, accessible from
- programs like Easy-CD Pro '95. This allows recovery of the CD-R media
- after certain classes of failed writes.
-
- All Sony drives can do packet writing.
-
- Firmware for some models can be hard to find.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - CDU926 and CDU928. Believe it or not, the CDU926 and
- CDU928 don't support disc-at-once recording (see section (2-9) for a
- description). Instead they use "variable-gap track-at-once", which allows
- TAO audio recordings with barely perceptible gaps between tracks. Some
- popular software packages aren't as useful when disc-at-once isn't
- available, so people considering these drives should carefully consider how
- they plan to use them.
-
- (All other Sony units do support DAO.)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-3] Smart & Friendly
- (2001/01/04)
-
- See http://www.justdeals.com/
- See http://tech.smartandfriendly.com/ (some ROM upgrades)
-
- Models are:
- CDR1002 (2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU920S)
- CDR1004 (4x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-102)
- CDR2004 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony 940S)
- CDR2006 "Pro" (6x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Sony 926S)
- CDR2006 "Plus" (6x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W2020)
- CDR4000 (4x4/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
- CDR4006 (6x4/2MB;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-400)
- CD-RW226 "Plus" (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W2042)
- CD-RW426 (6x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on the Yamaha CRW-4001/4260)
- CD SpeedWriter 4012 (12x4/1MB;SCSI, based on the Teac CD-R55S)
- CD SpeedRacer (16x4x4/2MB;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CRW-4416S?)
- CD Racer 2x2x24 (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, based on the JVC XR-W2080)
- CD SpeedWriter Plus (24x4x2/2MB;IDE (SCSI for ext), based on the JVC XR-W4080)
- CD TurboWriter (24x6/2MB;SCSI, based on the Teac CD-R56S)
- CD Rocket 8020 (20x8/2MB;SCSI, based on the Sanyo/Caravelle CRD-R800S)
- CD Pocket RW (20x4x4/2MB;PCMCIA-2, based on ??)
- CD Rocket RW (20x8x2/2MB;SCSI, based on ??)
- CD SpeedWriter RW (24x4x2/?MB;SCSI, based on JVC XR-4424?)
- CD TurboWriter RW (24x6x4/2MB;SCSI, based on Ricoh 7060A?)
- CD CpeedWriter 32 (32x4x4/2MB;SCSI, based on Teac CD-W54E)
- CD Rocket Mach 12 (32x12x4/4MB;SCSI, based on Sanyo CRD-RW2?)
-
- All models are recorders built by major manufacturers, repackaged and
- supported by Smart & Friendly.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - the company apparently went bankrupt in mid-May 2000. See
- the article at http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2597858,00.html.
- The web page was still running as of August 2000, but got changed to a
- pointer to justdeals.com after JustDeals bought up S&F's inventory.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-4] Philips
- (2002/10/31)
-
- See http://www.pcstuff.philips.com/
- See http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Bay/6893/ (2600/3600)
-
- Models are:
- CDD522 (2x2/2MB;SCSI)
- CDD2000 (4x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CDD2600 (6x2/1MB;SCSI)
- Omniwriter/26 (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CDD3600 (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI) and CDD3610 (IDE)
- CDD3801 (24x2x2/1MB;IDE)
- CDD4201 (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDRW200 (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, based on JVC XR-W2080? repackaged CDD3801?)
- CDRW400 (16x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on Yamaha 4416E)
- CDRW404 (32x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDD4801 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- PCRW804K (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- PCRW2412 (40x24x12/8MB;IDE)
- PCRW4012 (48x40x12/4MB;IDE)
-
- The CDD521 (2x2/256K) is an ancient model; if you use one, the firmware
- upgrade is strongly recommended (but nearly impossible to find these
- days). Some information that may be of use to CDD521 owners can be found
- at http://www.fadden.com/doc/cdd521faq.txt.
-
- The Omniwriter/26 and /26A appear to be repackaged Ricoh 6200 and 6200I
- OEMs. In Europe, the 3600 is packaged in a kit as the PCA350RW, the 3610
- as the PCA362RW, and the 3610 with a parallel-port interface comes as the
- PCA363RW. The CDRW400 might be packaged as the PCA460RW.
-
- The CDD522 does not support reading of subcode-Q data. The CDD521, CDD522,
- and Kodak-labeled PCD225 have a sensor that can read the barcode data from
- the inner ring on a CD.
-
- See the HP section for comments about the CDD2000 firmware. The firmware
- is kept in flash ROM, so it can be updated with software obtainable over
- the net. You should be at version 1.25 or later for best results.
-
- Digital audio extraction may not work correctly at higher than 2x on the
- CDD2600, especially near the end of the disc. Philips has acknowledged
- that audio CDs and packet-written CDs may not read correctly at 6x, but
- many users have had problems at 4x as well. It may also suffer from the
- block offset problem described in section (4-19). The CDD2600 supports
- packet writing, but is NOT flash upgradeable.
-
- The CDD2600 may share the HP 6020i's difficulties with pressed CD-ROMs that
- have a small amount of data on them.
-
- The initial release (firmware v1.0) of the 3610 was unable to create audio
- discs reliably using disc-at-once recording. Firmware v2.02 fixed this and
- some other problems.
-
- Philips' drives, notably the CDD2600, have been shown to hang on some
- Amigas if SCSI disconnect is enabled and you try to read the session
- information from a multisession CD. Philips does not believe this problem
- happens on PCs, and consequently has declined to investigate further. If
- you are experiencing hangs when examining multisession CDs, try turning
- SCSI disconnect off for the CD recorder.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - CDD2000. Some users of Philips CDD2000 and derivative
- units (like the HP4020i) have reported that the drives went bad over a
- short period of time, often 1 to 3 months. While these cases represent the
- minority of users, reports have been persistent. People with the technical
- skills (and bravery) required to replace a spring and/or lubricate inside
- the unit have reported good results (see section (4-10) for details). If
- you buy a CDD2000-based unit -- of which there are many -- be sure the
- dealer or manufacturer is aware of this problem and is willing to fix or
- exchange the drive should it arise.
-
- A class-action lawsuit was filed against Philips on behalf of owners of
- the CDD2000 and CDD2600. The case was eventually settled, with Philips
- agreeing to make restitution.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-5] Hewlett-Packard (HP)
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.hpcdwriter.com/ [down?]
- See http://www.hp.com/isgsupport/cdr/
-
- Models are:
- 4020i (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000) (#C4324)
- 6020 (6x2/1MB;SCSI, based on Philips CDD2600; i)nt, e)xt, p)arallel) (#C4325)
- 7100i/e (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on Philips CDD3610; 'i' is IDE (#C4353A),
- 'e' is parallel (#C4358A))
- 7500i/e (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, see note below, parallel 'e' model is 6x2x2)
- 8100i (24x4x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Sony CRX100E)
- 8200i/e (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on a Sony CRX120E; 'e' is 6x-read USB)
- 8250i (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, see note below)
- 9100i (32x8x4/4MB;IDE, see note below)
- 9200i (32x8x4/4MB;SCSI, based on Sony CRX140)
- 9300i (32x10x4/4MB;IDE, based on Sony CRX145E)
- 9500i (32x12x8/4MB;IDE, based on Sony CRX160E?)
- 9600i (32x12x8/4MB;SCSI, based on Sony CRX160S?)
- 9700i (40x16x10/8MB;IDE, based on ??)
- 9900i (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx8, based on ??)
- cd12i (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- cd16i (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- cd24i (40x24x10/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- dvd100i (32x10x12/2MB;IDE, writes DVD+RW, based on Philips ??)
-
- The 7110 is identical to the 7100, but comes with an extra piece of
- software and is only available in the USA. The 7200 is a 7100 with updated
- firmware (2.x) and Easy CD Creator included. The 8110 is the same as the
- 8100 but with a bunch of extra software; ditto for 8210 vs 8200. The
- 6020ep appears to be the external SCSI drive with a parallel-to-SCSI
- converter. It's usable as a SCSI device as well. The 71XXe drives are
- 71XXi drives with a parallel-to-IDE converter. The 7500 series is often
- packaged as 7550 or 7570 (though these are now listed as having only 1MB of
- buffer, so it's not clear what's going on).
-
- There are indications that HP shipped two different drives as the 8250, both
- with the same read and write speeds. The first was the Philips CDD4201,
- identifiable by about 18 tiny horizontal indentations along the bottom of
- the face, with a hinged "drawbridge" loading door. The second was the Sony
- CRX120E, which has 4 horizontal indentations along the bottom of the face,
- and no hinged door. The popular consensus is that the Philips versions
- are problematic. It may be possible to tell the boxes apart using a code
- on the barcode label: C4464A for Philips, C4464B for Sony. (It appears
- there may even be a third variety: HP is rebadging Mitsumi 4804TE in their
- Pavilion 6648C computers. There doesn't appear to be an HP model number
- associated with the drive though, so it may not actually be sold as an 8250.)
- It now appears that some 8250i drives are 32x4x4/4MB; these are actually
- Sony CRX140E drives (32x8x4/4MB) with firmware that limits them to 4x
- recording. It has been reported that, if you can get the HP9100i firmware
- onto the drive, it will record at 8x.
-
- There are similar indications for the 7500, which appears to have originally
- been a JVC XR-W2080, but is now a Sony CRX100E with a reduced maximum
- write speed. Drives based on the Sony mechanism can reportedly be
- flashed with the Sony CRX100E firmware update and upgraded to 4x recording.
-
- Most 9100 uints are based on the Sony CRX140, but there are indications
- that units identifying themselves as "9100b" is actually a Goldstar
- CED-8080B.
-
- The initial release of the 7100/7110 was unable to create audio discs
- reliably with disc-at-once recording. The 2.02 firmware upgrade fixes
- the problem.
-
- Some people have criticized the 8100i (same as Sony CRX100E) for being unable
- to write more than about 78 minutes on an oversized (e.g. 80-minute) blank.
- It appears that the Sony v1.0n firmware upgrade removes this limitation, but
- the upgrade was never made available for the HP drive. Some users have
- had success flashing the drive with a "hacked" version of the Sony firmware,
- but this can be dangerous (see warnings in section (5-24)).
-
- If you are having trouble getting the 7100e to work with your parallel
- port, see http://www.hp.com/isgsupport/cdr/tech/7100/par95.html for some
- important configuration advice. If your BIOS is configured to use address
- 03BCh, you should change it to 0378h or 0278h.
-
- It appears that discs written with a 7110 can't be read on a Toshiba
- XM6002B. Other models of CD-ROM drives, including other Toshiba models,
- work fine. CD-Rs written on other CD recorders work fine with the
- Toshiba. The 3.01 firmware upgrade fixes this.
-
- The HP 4020i got off to a rough start because of buggy firmware and
- problems with the AdvanSys SCSI controller shipped with the drive. Four
- firmware upgrades have been made available so far (v1.20, v1.25, v1.26, and
- v1.27), and most but not all problems with the firmware have been
- eliminated. HP recommends that users with the v1.20 or later firmware who
- aren't having problems should NOT get the upgrade. Contact HP tech support
- for more information.
-
- The comments about digital audio extraction problems and the CDD2600 apply
- to the 6020i as well. Unlike the CDD2600, the 6020 apparently does not
- support packet writing. The firmware is not flash upgradeable. (As it
- happens, the SCSI ID string *can* be changed, and it *is* possible to make
- the unit think it's a CDD2600. A representative from Adaptec has warned
- that the procedure could cause problems later on, however.)
-
- The 6020 with v1.07 firmware also has trouble reading some pressed CD-ROM
- discs, notably single-track CD-ROMs with less than 27MB of data.
-
- An unofficial HP 4020i FAQ maintained by Greg Volk can be found at
- http://www.cd-info.com/CDIC/Technology/CD-R/HP-FAQ.html.
-
- Drivers, software, and firmware upgrades are available from
- ftp://ftp.hp.com/pub/information_storage/surestore/cd-writer/.
-
- The 7100/7110 firmware upgrade is available here:
- http://www.hp.com/isgsupport/cdr/70index.html
-
- IMPORTANT - 7100/7110. The 7100/7110 drew a lot of fire because it shipped
- with DirectCD (packet-writing software), a CD Copier, and an audio CD
- creator. It didn't include premastering software for data CDs. Because
- packet-written CDs can't be read on all operating systems or all CD-ROM
- drives, the inability to create plain Level 1 ISO-9660 discs was a problem
- for some users. People who buy this drive should expect to buy additional
- software. The software bundled with the 7200 was more wisely chosen.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - 4020i. See the notes on the CDD2000 in the previous
- section. Also, the AdvanSys controller continues to cause problems for
- some users, which is made worse by HP's refusal to support people who try
- to use a different card. The best approach seems to be to try the card and
- stick with it if it works, otherwise buy an Adaptec board (e.g. the 1522A)
- and use it with that. There may be a newer rev of the AdvanSys board.
-
- A few 4020 users have reported that, after getting lots of "-24 - Target
- aborted" errors with jarnold's software, they successfully resolved their
- problems by getting a new drive from HP.
-
- A class-action lawsuit has been filed against HP (for the HP4020i and
- HP6020i) by the same people who filed the suit against Philips. See the
- end of section (5-1-4) for links.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-6] Plasmon
- (1998/11/27)
-
- See http://www.plasmon.com/
- See http://tech.plasmon.co.uk/
-
- Models are:
- RF4100 (2x2/1MB+;SCSI, based on Philips CDD522 but with different firmware)
- CDR4220 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000)
- CDR4240 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Panasonic CW-7501)
- CDR-4400 (4x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
- CDR480 (8x4/1MB;SCSI, based on the Panasonic CW-7502)
-
- The RF4102 is an RF4100 with more memory.
-
- The RF4100 does not support disc-at-once recording.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-7] Kodak
- (1999/04/11)
-
- See http://www.kodak.com/ [ no CD recorder info? ]
-
- Models are:
- PCD200 (?x2/256K;SCSI)
- PCD225 (2x2/2MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD522)
- PCD240 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000)
- PCD600 (?x6/2MB+;SCSI)
- 4801 (??;IDE, based on the Mitsumi 4801??)
-
- The Philips CDD522, Kodak PCD225, and Kodak PCD600 will interface with the
- Kodak Disc Transporter, which supports unattended duplication of up to 75
- CD-Rs, making it a useful combo for CD-R production.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-8] JVC
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.jvc.com/ [no CD-R info? ]
-
- Models are:
- XR-W1001 (1x1/64K;SCSI)
- XR-W2001 (2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- XR-W2010 (4x2/1MB;SCSI)
- XRS-201 (2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- XR-W2020 (6x2/1MB;SCSI)
- XR-W2042 (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- [on the JVC web site, no model number?] (12x4/1MB;IDE)
- XR-W2080 (24x2x2/2MB;IDE)
- XR-W4080 (24x4x2/2MB;IDE)
- XR-W4424 (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
-
- The drives are sometimes sold with model numbers that have 2 added, so
- XR-W2010 might appear as XR-W2012, XR-W2020 as XR-W2022, and XR-W2080 as
- XR-W2082. The XR-W2626 appears to be an XR-W2020.
-
- The drives often come bundled with JVC "Personal Archiver" or "RomMaker"
- software. The XR-W2010 and XR-W2020 also come with "FloppyCD"
- packet-writing software.
-
- JVC only provides support for drives purchased directly from them, but
- firmware updates can be found at http://www.jvcinfo.com/service/firmware.htm.
- If you don't buy a JVC drive from JVC, make sure your vendor provides a
- warranty.
-
- If you are getting "servo tracking error", "seek error", or "track following
- error" messages with an XR-W2010 or XR-W2020, your drive may need to be
- opened up and lubricated. Step-by-step instructions for doing so can be
- found on http://www.smial.prima.de/old/howtoget.htm. If you're not quite
- up to that, try turning the drive off and leaving it off until right before
- you're ready to burn. Some units have trouble when they get warm.
-
- Several users have reported difficulty installing the XR-W2020, but the
- troubles appear to stem from the SCSI card bundled with the drive rather
- than the drive itself.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - XR-W2010. Firmware version 1.51 has some serious flaws
- that can cause problems when using the drive as either a writer or a
- reader. The v2.05 update fixed most of the problems, but some conflicts
- with 3rd-party software remained, so the update was withdrawn. Until these
- problems are fixed, this drive should only be used with the JVC software,
- and should not be used as a reader. Power-cycling the unit (i.e. powering
- it off and back on) immediately before a write may cure some problems. For
- examples and some tests, see http://www.fadden.com/doc/jvc-prob.txt.
-
- While there are a large number of people who are using these drives without
- problems, one person affiliated with a CD-R software company referred to
- the XR-W2010 as their "#1 tech support nightmare".
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - XR-W2020. The mechanism appears to have the same problems
- with lubrication as the XR-W2010. After several months of successful use,
- the unit will start returning "tracking error" messages.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-9] Pinnacle
- (1998/06/05)
-
- See http://www.pinnaclemicro.com/producta1.htm
-
- Models are:
- RCD-202 (?x1/64K;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W1001)
- RCD-1000 (2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W2001)
- RCD-5020 (2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- RCD-5040 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W2010)
- RCD-4X4 (4x4/1MB;SCSI, based on the Teac CD-R50S)
- RCDW226 (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI)
-
- The -1000, -5020, and -5040 models are flash ROM upgradeable.
-
- RCD-1000 units shipped after Sept 1995 can do audio extraction if they have
- firmware v2.35 or later. An upgrade is available from their BBS.
-
- If you are getting "servo tracking error", "seek error", or "track
- following error" with a 5040, see the notes in the JVC XR-W2010 section.
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - all drives. Pinnacle customer support is reported to be
- almost nonexistent, except for some recent tech support via e-mail. Many
- owners of the RCD-5040 are perfectly happy with their drives (see the
- caveat on the JVC XR-W2010), but most of the stories about Pinnacle's
- product support are negative.
-
- Pinnacle earned a bad reputation after shipping drives with buggy firmware,
- a poorly ventilated enclosure, and bad customer support. Some owners of
- the RCD-1000 have gotten the unit to work, others have given up in despair.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-10] Ricoh
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.ricoh.com/
- See http://www.ricohcpg.com/
- See http://www.arrakis-ttm.com/cdr/tommp6200.html
-
- Models are:
- RS-9200CD (?x1/1.2MB;SCSI)
- RO-1060C/RS-1060C (2x2/512K;SCSI)
- RS-1420C (4x2/512K+;SCSI)
- MP-6200 (6x2x2/1MB; 'S' is SCSI, 'A' or 'I' is IDE)
- MP-7040 (20x4x4/2MB; 'S' is SCSI, 'A' is IDE)
- MP-7060 (24x6x4/2MB; 'S' is SCSI, 'A' is IDE)
- MP-7080A (32x8x4/4MB;IDE)
- MP-8040SE (20x4x4/2MB;PCMCIA-2(SCSI), battery-powered)
- MP-9060A (24x6x4/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx4)
- MP-7120A (32x12x10/4MB;IDE)
- MP-7200A (40x20x10/2MB;IDE)
- MP-9120A (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx8)
- MP-9200A (40x20x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx12)
-
- The MP-6200 uses a tray, the MP-6201 uses caddies and has a 2MB buffer.
-
- The RS1060C does not support disc-at-once recording, reading of digital
- audio, or subcode-Q data. (One user reported that his RO1060C *could* read
- digital audio, but the drive took a little convincing. Another user says
- that it has always been supported, but not documented, so it can be done
- with the right software, e.g. CDDA v1.5.) The RS-1060C is the RO-1060C
- in an external case.
-
- The RS-1420C is flash upgradeable (though it can be a little tricky since
- there are different variants of the drive, and each requires a different
- ROM image). It does not support packet writing. Most of the commercial
- versions come with a 2MB buffer (the last digit of the firmware version
- will be 0, 1, or 2, indicating 512K, 1MB, and 2MB, respectively).
-
- The firmware on the flash-upgradeable MP-6200 should either be at v2.20 or
- later. Version 1.0 had several problems, version 2.0 didn't get along so
- well with DirectCD 2.0, and version 2.03 had some DAE issues.
-
- Firmware upgrades are available from Tom Varghese's page listed above
- (arrakis-ttm.com) and http://www.ricoh.co.jp/cd-r/cgi/e-/version.html.
-
- The MP-6200 "red/green" problem, where the drive starts having trouble
- accepting media, and sits there flashing red and green, appears to be caused
- by a buildup of oil on the drive's spindle clamp. See the arrakis-ttm.com
- site for details.
-
- Some people have found that the MP7040/7060 will start to "stick" after
- a while, resulting in consistent write errors at roughly the same spot
- every time. Some people have found that lubricating the drive helps.
- This is a dangerous procedure, and should not be attempted unless
- all other possibilities have been exhausted. Details can be found on
- http://www.don.cohoon.net/ricoh/ricoh.html.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-11] Pioneer
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.pioneerusa.com/cds.html [ mass replication ]
- See http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/
- See http://www.pioneer.co.jp/ [ if you can read Japanese ]
-
- Models are:
- DW-S114X (4x4/1MB;SCSI)
-
- The PDR-05 is an audio CD-R recorder, described in section (5-12).
-
- Does not support disc-at-once recording. Mainly sold in large jukebox
- systems.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-12] Olympus
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.olympusamerica.com/digital/products/CDR2x4/CDR2x4.html
- See http://www.olympusamerica.com/digital/products/cdr2x6/cdr2x6.html
-
- Models are:
- CDS615E (2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU920S)
- CDS620E (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU924S)
- CD-R2x6 (6x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU926S??)
-
- The CD-R2 is the CDS615E in an external case. The CD-R2x4 might be the
- external version of the CDS620E. The CD-R2x6 probably has a name like
- CDS640E, but it's not listed as such on their web site.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-13] Optima
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.optimatech.com/
-
- Models are:
- DisKovery 650 CD-R (2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU920S)
- DisKovery 1300 CD-R (6x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU960S?)
- Optima CDWriter (6x4x2/2MB;SCSI, based on ??)
-
- As of the middle of 2003, Optima was busily suing CD-R software manufacturers
- and resellers over (among other things) US patent #5,666,531. This patent,
- filed in April of 1995, appears to cover packet writing.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-14] Mitsumi
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.mitsumi.com/
-
- Models are:
- CR-2200CS (2x2/4MB;SCSI, based partly on the Philips CDD2000)
- CR-2201CS (same as CR-2200CS but with 2x2/1MB)
- CR-2401TS (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000)
- CR-2600TE (6x2/1MB;IDE)
- CR-2801TE (8x2/512K;IDE)
- CR-4801TE (8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CR-4802TE (8x4x2/2MB;IDE) and CR-4802TU (USB)
- CR-4804TE (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CR-4805TE (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CR-4808TE (40x16x8/2MB;IDE)
- CR-4809TE (40x24x12/2MB/IDE)
- CR-480ATE (40x32x12/2MB;IDE, sometimes referred to as 48xA)
- CR-485CTE (48x40x20/2MB;IDE)
- CR-48XETE (48x48x12/2MB?;IDE)
- CR-487ETE (52x52x24/2MB?;IDE)
- CR-485GTE (54x54x32/2MB?;IDE)
-
- In all unit designations, 'C' means caddy, and 'T' means tray, 'S' is SCSI,
- and 'E' is IDE.
-
- The devices based on the CDD2000 are flash upgradeable (you should be
- able to use Philips CDD2000 images).
-
- CAVEAT EMPTOR - CR-2600TE and CR-2801TE. These drives do not support
- disc-at-once recording. Like the Sony 926 and 928 units, they claim to
- support track-at-once with nearly imperceptible gaps instead. Ahead's Nero
- can reportedly do this with the CR-2801TE.
-
- The CR-4801TE with firmware 2.01 and later supports DAO recording. Earlier
- versions do not. If your recording software doesn't believe that the drive
- is capable of DAO, you may need to update the software to a version that is
- aware of the changes in the firmware update.
-
- Later drives, such as the 4802TE, do support DAO.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-15] DynaTek Automation Systems
- (2001/03/03)
-
- See http://www.dynatek.co.uk/
-
- Models are:
- CDRW8424 (24x8x4;SCSI)
- CDM200 (2x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CDM240J (4x2/512K;SCSI, based on the JVC XR-W2010)
- CDM400 (4x4/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
- CDE260R (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Ricoh 6200S)
-
- [ DynaTek reportedly went out of business. However, the UK site seems
- to be alive and well. ]
-
- Older CDM240 units were based on the Yamaha CDR-102. Since the Yamaha
- CDR-100 is no longer being made, chances are the CDM400 is now a different
- unit as well.
-
- They also sell the CDM4000, which is a stand-alone CD burner.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-16] Microboards of America
- (1998/06/14)
-
- See http://www.microboards.com/
-
- Models are:
- PlayWrite 2000 (2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Sony CDU920S)
- PlayWrite 2040 (4x2/512K+;SCSI)
- PlayWrite 4000 (4x4/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
- PlayWrite 4001RW (6x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on the Yamaha CDR4001t)
- PlayWrite 2060R (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Ricoh 6200S)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-17] Micro Design International
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.mdi.com/mdinofr/products/cdwriter.htm
-
- Model is the Express Writer. There are no apparent model numbers. They
- used to sell the "old one" (2x2/1MB, based on a Pinnacle (i.e. JVC) drive),
- more recently they sold the "new one" (4x2/?).
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-18] MicroNet Technology
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.micronet.com/HTDOCS/products.html#cdr [ site gone? ]
-
- Models are:
- MasterCD Plus 4x4 (4x4/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
- MasterCD Plus 4x6 (6x4/2MB;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-400)
- MasterCD Plus 4x12 (12x4/1MB;SCSI, based on the Teac CD-R55S)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-19] Procom Technology
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.procom.com/homepage/wbhrcdrs.html
-
- Models are:
- PCDR-4X (4x4/512K;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CDR-100)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-20] Grundig
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.grundig.com/ [mostly in German]
-
- Models are:
- CDR100IPW (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-21] Plextor
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.plextor.com/
- See http://www.plextor.be/
-
- Models are:
- PX-R24CS (4x2/512K;SCSI, a cousin of the Ricoh 1420C)
- PX-R412C (12x4/2MB;SCSI)
- PX-R820T (20x8/4MB;SCSI)
- PX-W4220T (20x4x2/2MB;SCSI)
- PX-W8220T (20x8x2/4MB;SCSI)
- PX-W8432T (32x8x4/2MB;IDE), also SCSI PX-W8432Ti/SW with 4MB
- PX-W124TS (32x12x4/4MB;SCSI)
- PX-W1210TA (32x12x10/2MB;IDE), also SCSI PX-W1210TS with 4MB
- PX-W1610TA (40x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- PX-W2410TA (40x24x10/4MB;IDE, also 'U' portable USB)
- PX-S88TU (24x8x8/2MB;USB;portable)
- PX-208U (24x8x8/2MB;USB2.0, reads DVDx8, portable)
- PX-320A (40x20x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx12)
- PX-W4012TA (40x40x12/4MB;IDE)
- PX-W4824TA (48x48x24/4MB;IDE, TU model is external USB2.0)
- PX-W5224TA (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- PW-"Premium" (52x52x32/8MB;IDE)
-
- For all units, 'C' indicates caddy, 'T' indicates tray, 'S' is SCSI, 'A'
- is ATAPI, 'U' is USB.
-
- All units are flash upgradeable. All units except the PX-R24CS support
- packet writing.
-
- Users having trouble with the PX-R412C should try turning synchronous
- transfer off for that drive.
-
- There appears to be an issue with the Plextor PX-320A and a SiS IDE chipset.
- Using the DMA jumper to change the Plextor drive from UltraDMA to multi-word
- DMA fixes the problem.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-22] Panasonic (Matsushita)
- (2001/12/05)
-
- See http://www.panasonic.com/office/storage/stor.html
-
- Models are:
- CW-7501 (4x2/1MB;SCSI)
- CW-7502 (8x4/1MB;SCSI)
- CW-7503 (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CW-7582 (8x4/1MB;IDE)
- CW-7585/CW-7586 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- KXL-RW10A (20x4x4/2MB;SCSI;portable)
-
- Panasonic is part of Matsushita, so the units may also be sold under the
- Matsushita label.
-
- All units are flash-upgradeable. The CW-7501 should be at 2.0 or greater,
- and the CW-7502 should be at vX.10 or later (1.10, 3.10, or 4.10 depending
- on which recorder variant you have; check your current version). Upgrades
- are available from http://www.acscompro.com/ (click on "Support") [site
- was down as of May 2002?].
-
- NOTE: there is a known conflict with the Diamond FirePort 40 and the
- Panasonic CW-7502 CD-R drive. You should upgrade the 7502 firmware to the
- latest (www.acscompro.com/support/s_cdr.htm), upgrade your FirePort 40
- drivers (http://www.diamondmm.com/products/drivers/fireport.html), and
- add "DisableAutoReqSense=1;do_SCAM=0;" to the FirePort driver (go into the
- Win95 device settings, select the host adapter, click on Properties, and
- select the Settings tab).
-
- This problem may affect other NCR/Symbios Logic-based SCSI cards as well.
- Falling back to the original (1.01) NCR SCSI drivers that come with Win95
- should fix the problem.
-
- NOTE: the 7502/7503 units may have a problem with writing near the end of
- 80-minute discs. The problem is fixed by a firmware upgrade. If you get
- errors reading data stored near the end of the disc (e.g. errors creating
- a disc image from a full 80-minute CD or CD-ROM), make sure you have the
- latest firmware.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-23] Teac
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.teac.com/DSPD/DesktopCDRW.html
- See http://www.teac.co.jp/
-
- Models are:
- CD-R50S (4x4/1MB;SCSI)
- CD-R55S (12x4/1MB;SCSI)
- CD-R56S (24x6/2MB;SCSI)
- CD-R58S (24x8/4MB;SCSI)
- CD-W54E (32x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CD-WE54E (6x4x4/2MB;USB)
- CD-W58E (32x8x8/?MB;IDE)
- CD-W512 (32x12x10/4MB; 'E' is IDE, 'S' is SCSI)
- CD-W516 (40x16x10/2MB; 'E' is IDE)
- CD-W524E (40x24x10/2MB/IDE)
- CD-W540E (48x40x12/8MB;IDE, F540 is external USB (6x4x4) or USB2.0)
- CD-W522E (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
-
- Apparently the CD-R50S needs to be at firmware 1.0E or later to do
- quad-speed writing reliably. Power calibration is done via a lookup table
- rather than adjusted dynamically, so a flash upgrade may be required before
- some brands of media will work.
-
- The CD-R50S and CD-R55S appear to use the same command set as the JVC
- XR-W2010.
-
- http://www.teac.co.jp/dspd/download/firmware/cd-r55s/updater.html
- has a nice HTML page about the CD-R55S upgrade.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-24] Wearnes
- (2001/06/25)
-
- See http://www.wpinet.com.sg/ [site gone?]
-
- Models are:
- CDR-432 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2000)
- CD-R 622 (6x2/1MB;IDE)
- CD-R 632P (6x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Philips CDD2600)
- CDRW-622 (6x2x2/1MB;IDE)
-
- The CD-R 622 does not support disc-at-once recording. According to the
- CDRDAO "readme" file, it is possible to upgrade the 622 (and its Memorex
- cousin) by writing the D4.0 ROM image for the CRW-1622 to a 27c020 PLCC
- EPROM and replacing the socketed ROM chip in the drive.
-
- The CDRW-622 supports packet writing, and is flash upgradeable.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-25] Turtle Beach
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.tbeach.com/products/tbs2040r.htm
-
- Models are:
- 2040R (4x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Ricoh RS-1420C)
-
- Many users have had trouble installing the AdvanSys SCSI card that is
- bundled with this unit. Most of the problems can be corrected by enabling
- PnP installation, which is disabled by default.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-26] Creative Labs
- (2001/10/28)
-
- See http://www.creaf.com/
-
- Models are:
- CDR2000 (2x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Ricoh RS1060C)
- CDR2224 (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, based on JVC XR-W2080?)
- CDR4210 (4x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Panasonic CW-7501)
- CDR4224 (24x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on a JVC XR-W4080)
- CDR?? "CD Studio" (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- CDR6424 (24x6x4/2MB;IDE, based on Ricoh 7060A)
- CDR8432 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE, based on PX-W8432T; also 8433/8435/8438/8439)
- CDR8433 (same as 8432, based on Panasonic CW-7585)
- CDR8435 (same as 8432, based on Samsung SW-208)
- CDR8438 (same as 8432, based on Samsung ??)
- CDR8439 (same as 8432, based on Panasonic CW-7586)
- CDR121032 #1 (32x12x10/2MB;SCSI, based on Plextor PX-W1210)
- CDR121032 #2 (32x12x10/2MB;SCSI, based on Lite-On LTR-1210)
- CDR161040 (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- CDR241040 (40x24x10/2MB;USB or FireWire, based on ??)
-
- Creative sold several drives with the 32x8x4 rating, starting with the
- Plextor-based 8432. According to http://www.ping.be/satcp/writer04.htm,
- the 8433, 8435, 8438, and 8439 are similar but different devices. Looks
- like they did something similar with the 32x12x10 drive.
-
- Generally speaking, reading the retail box won't tell you what's inside.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-27] Taiyo Yuden
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See ?
-
- Models are:
- EW-50 (4x2/?;SCSI)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-28] Memorex
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.memorex.com/
- See http://www.memorexlive.com/support/
-
- Models are:
- CR-622 (6x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Wearnes CD-R 622)
- CRW-1622 (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Wearnes CDRW-622)
- CRW-2642 (6x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on the Yamaha CRW-4260??)
- CDRW-2216 (16x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Yamaha CRW-2216E)
- CDRW-2224 (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, based on JVC XR-W2080?)
- CDRW-4206-USB (6x4x2/2MB;USB, based on ??)
- CRW-4224 (24x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on JVC XR-W4080?)
- CDRW-8220 (20x8x2/2MB;SCSI, based on ??)
- CDRW-12432 (32x12x4/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- "32X CD ReWritable Drive" (40x32x12/?MB;IDE)
- "40X CD ReWritable Drive" (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- "48X CD ReWritable Drive" (48x48x12/2MB;IDE)
- "48Xv2 CD ReWritable Drive" (48x48x24/2MB;IDE)
- "52X CD-ReWritable Drive" (52x52x24/?MB;IDE)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-29] Hi-Val
- (1999/02/07)
-
- See http://www.hival.com/
-
- Hi-Val doesn't build CD recorders. They repackage and provide support for
- recorders built by others. The actual model you get will vary (Wearnes,
- Ricoh, Philips, JVC, Mitsumi, and others have been reported).
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-30] Dysan
- (1999/02/07)
-
- See ??
-
- Models are:
- CR-622 (6x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Wearnes CD-R 622)
- CRW-1420C (6x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Ricoh 1420C??)
- CRW-1622 (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Wearnes CDRW-622)
- CDRW-2216 (16x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Yamaha CRW-2216E)
-
- The CRW-1622 often came bundled with NTI's software, but the version
- included didn't work correctly. Upgrading to a more recent version of the
- software (http://www.ntius.com/) resolved the problems.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-31] Traxdata
- (2001/10/28)
-
- See http://www.traxdata.com/ [ site requires Flash ]
-
- Models are:
- CDR4120 (12x4/1MB;SCSI, based on the Teac CD-R55S)
- CDRW2260 "Pro" (6x2x2/1MB;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CRW-2260)
- CDRW2260 "Plus" (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD3610?)
- CDRW-4260 "Pro" (6x4x2/2MB;SCSI, based on the Yamaha CRW-4260)
- CDRW-2224 "Plus" (24x2x2/?MB;???, based on Philips CDD3801?)
- CDRW-4424 "Plus" (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD4201?)
-
- The CDRW2260 "Pro" may also use a Philips CDD3600?
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-32] BenQ (nee Acer)
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.benq.com/
- See http://www.acercm.com/
-
- Models are:
- CDW6206A (6x2x2/512K;IDE)
- CRW4406EU (6x4x4/2MB;USB)
- CRW4432A (32x4x4/?MB;IDE)
- CRW6432A (32x6x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRW8432A (32x8x4/8MB;IDE)
- CRW8432IA (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRW1032A (32x10x4/4MB;IDE)
- CRW1610A (40x16x10/?MB;IDE)
- CRW2410MR (32x24x10/?MB; external USB2.0)
- CRW3210A (40x32x10/?MB;IDE 'AI' is USB2.0)
- CRW4012P (48x40x12/?MB;IDE, 'EU' is USB2.0)
- CRW4816P (48x48x16/2MB;IDE)
- CRW5224P (52x52x24/2MB;IDE, 'WU' is USB2.0)
-
- A user who was getting nothing but power calibration complaints with the
- CRW1032A and firmware 7.EZ found a laser power adjustment tool in the
- 7.GZ update from the www.acercm.com site. The North American version
- reportedly doesn't come with the tool, but it may not be needed.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-33] Waitec
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.waitec.com/
-
- Models are:
- WT4046 (6x4x2/2MB; "EI" model is IDE)
- WT2036 (6x2x2/1MB; "EI" model is IDE)
- WT412 (12x4/1MB;SCSI)
- WT48 (8x4/1MB;SCSI)
- WT2082 (20x2x2/4MB;SCSI, "EXT" is external, based on ??)
- WT2444EI (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD4201?)
- "Frisby" (24x4x4/2MB;PCMCIA/USB)
- WT3244EI (32x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- WT3284EI (32x8x4/4MB;IDE, based on Plextor PX-W3284?)
- "Shuttle" (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- "Celerus" (32x10x4/4MB;IDE)
- "Saurus" (32x12x8/4MB;IDE)
- "Raptor" (32x12x10/4MB; "Red" is IDE; based on Sanyo CRD-BP1300P??)
- "X-File" (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx8, writes DVD+RWx2.5)
- "Aladar" (40x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- "T-Rex" (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, based on Sanyo CRD-BP1400P??)
- "SfinX 16" (40x16x10/8MB;IDE, also reads DVDx10)
- "Titan" (40x20x10/2MB;IDE)
- "Megalus" (40x24x10/2MB;IDE)
- "Storm 24" (40x24x10/?MB;IDE)
- "Storm 32" (40x32x10/4MB;IDE)
- "Frisby II" (40x40x12/2MB;USB2.0, portable)
- "Storm 40" (48x40x12/4MB;IDE)
- "Storm 48" (48x48x16/2MB;IDE)
- "Storm 52" (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- "Storm 52/3" (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-34] BTC
- (1998/11/18)
-
- See http://www.btcusa.com/
-
- Models are:
- BCE62IE (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD3610??)
-
- The BCE62IPE is the BCE62IE with a parallel-port IDE converter.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-35] Caravelle (Sanyo)
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.sanyo.com/ [ no CD-R info? ]
-
- Models are:
- CRD-R800S (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CRD-RW1 (20x8x2/2MB;SCSI)
- CRD-RW2 (32x12x4/4MB;SCSI)
- CRD-BP2 (32x12x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CRD-BP3 (32x12x10/2MB;SCSI)
- CRD-BP4 (40x16x10/2MB;SCSI, also in 4MB)
- CRD-BP900P (32x12x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRD-BP1300P (32x12x10/2MB;IDE)
- CRD-BP1400P (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, also in 4MB)
- CRD-BP1500P (40x24x10/2MB;IDE; 'U' is USB)
- CRD-BP1600P (40x32x10/4MB;IDE)
- CRD-SBP15A (32x24x10/2MB;IDE, portable, for OEM only)
- CRD-BP1500U40X (40x40x12/4MB;IDE, external is USB2.0)
- CRD-BP1600P (40x32x10/4MB;IDE)
- CRD-BP1700P (40x40x12/4MB;IDE)
-
- Firmware v1.10 or later is highly recommended for the CRD-R800S. For some
- reason, the firmware update was only available on the "BURN-Proof" web
- site at http://www.sannet.ne.jp/BURN-Proof/. [ It doesn't seem to be
- there anymore. ]
-
- It looks like Mirai Technologies (http://www.mirai-technologies.com/)
- resells these drives.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-36] Micro Solutions
- (1999/02/26)
-
- See http://www.micro-solutions.com/
-
- Models are:
- 190100 (6x2x2/1MB;Parallel, based on the Ricoh MP-6200)
- 190120/190126 (6x4x2/?MB;Parallel, based on the Yamaha CRW-4261)
- 190127 (8x4x2/2MB;Parallel, based on the Mitsumi CD-4802TE)
-
- All products are standard recorders combined with Micro Solution's
- parallel-port interface.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-37] Pacific Digital
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.1pdc.com/
-
- Models are:
- 224ei (24x2x2/2MB;IDE, based on the JVC XR-W2080)
- 226ei (6x2x2/1MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD3610??)
- 428ei (8x4x2/2MB;IDE, based on the Mitsumi CR-4802TE)
- 428USB (8x4x2/2MB;USB, based on the Mitsumi CR-4802TU)
- 416si (16x4x4/2MB;SCSI, based on Yamaha CRW-4416S?)
- 448USB (8x4x4/2MB;USB, based on ??)
- 8824si (24x8x8/4MB;SCSI, based on Yamaha CRW-8824??)
- 8832ei (32x8x8/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- 121032ei (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, based on Lite-On 32x12x10)
- 161040ei (40x16x10/8MB;IDE, based on CRW-2100?)
- 241040ei (40x24x10/2MB;IDE, also as USB)
- 321040ei?? (40x32x10/2MB;IDE)
- 321248ei (48x32x12/2MB;IDE)
- Xtreme32 #1 (40x32x10/2MB;USB2.0 and USB (8x4x4))
- Xtreme32 #2 (48x32x12/2MB;USB2.0 and USB (8x4x4))
- Mach40 #1 (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- Mach40 #2 (48x40x16/2MB;IDE)
- Mach48 (48x48x12/2MB;IDE)
- Xtreme48 (48x48x12/2MB;USB2.0 and USB (8x4x4))
- Mach52 (52x52x24/2MB;IDE, also available in USB2.0)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-38] Iomega
- (2003/05/23)
-
- See http://www.iomega.com/
-
- Models are:
- ZipCD (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on the Philips CDD4201)
- ZipCD external (6x4x4/2MB;USB, based on ??)
- CD-RW Predator 8x4x32 FireWire (32x8x4/2MB;FireWire)
- ZipCD 12/10/32 (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, based on Plextor PX-W1210T)
- ZipCD 16/10/40 (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, based on ??)
- CD-RW 24x10x40 USB (40x24x10/2MB;USB)
- CD-RW 40x12x48 USB (48x40x12/2MB;USB2.0), also available as FireWire
- CD-RW 48x24x48 USB (48x48x24/2MB;USB2.0)
- CD-RW 52x24x52 USB (52x52x24/2MB;USB2.0)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-39] Goldstar (LG Electronics)
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.lgeus.com/
- See http://www.lge.co.kr/
- See http://www.lgeservice.com/faqinfo.html#CDROMDrives
-
- Models are:
- CED-8041B (24x4x2/2MB;IDE)
- CED-8042B (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CED-8080B (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CED-8120B (32x12x8/8MB;IDE)
- GCC-4120B (32x12x8/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx8)
- GCE-8160B (40x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- GCE-8240B (40x24x10/8MB;IDE)
- GCE-8320B (40x32x10/2MB;IDE)
- GCC-4320B (40x32x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
- GCE-8400B (40x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- GCE-8480B (48x48x16/2MB;IDE)
- GCE-4480B (48x48x24/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
- GCE-8481B (48x48x24/2MB;IDE)
- GCE-4520B (52x52x24/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
- GCE-8520B (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- GCE-8523B (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
-
- The first two *might* be based on the Sony 100/120 models. There are
- indications that, at the very least, the firmware is different (the Goldstar
- units reportedly can "overburn" discs, while the mentioned Sony units
- couldn't when these were released.)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-40] AOpen
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.aopen.com/
-
- Models are:
- CR1420C (4x2/512K;SCSI, based on the Ricoh RS-1420C?)
- CRW620 (6x2/1MB;SCSI, based on ??)
- CRW622 (6x2/1MB;IDE, based on Wearnes CD-R 622??)
- CRS446U (6x4x4/1MB;USB, "crab shell")
- CRW9420 (20x4x4/2MB;IDE, based on Ricoh MP-7040A?)
- CRW9624 (24x6x4/2MB;IDE, based on Ricoh MP-7060A?)
- CRW9832 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CRW1232 (32x12x10/4MB;IDE)
- DRW4624 (24x6x4/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx4)
- RW5120A (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx2.4)
- DVRW2412PRO (32x12x10/2MB, also reads DVD+RW)
- CRW1632 (32x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- CRW2040 (40x20x10/2MB;IDE)
- CRW2440 (40x24x10/2MB;IDE)
- CRW3248 (48x32x12/2MB;IDE, has an option for 8MB buffer)
- EHW-4048U (48x40x12/2MB;USB2.0)
- CRW4048 (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- CRW4850 (50x48x12/2MB;IDE)
- CRW4852 (52x48x24/2MB;IDE)
- CRW5232 (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-41] Toshiba
- (2000/04/13)
-
- See http://www.toshiba.com/
-
- Models are:
- SD-R1002 (24x4x4/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx4)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-42] TDK
- (2002/10/15)
-
- See http://www.tdk.com/ [ site not responding ]
-
- Models are:
- 8/4/32 veloCD (32x8x4/4MB;IDE, based on ??)
- 12/10/32 veloCD (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, based on Plextor PX-W1210TA)
- 16/10/40 veloCD (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, based on Sanyo CRD-BP1400P?)
- 24/10/40 veloCD (40x24x10/2MB;IDE, also external USB2.0 and FireWire)
- 32/10/40 veloCD (40x32x10/2MB;IDE, based on Sanyo CRD-BP1600PN?)
- 40/12/48 veloCD (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- 48/16/48 veloCD (48x48x16/2MB;IDE, also external USB2.0)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-43] Lite-On
- (2003/11/29)
-
- See http://www.liteonit.com.tw/
-
- Models are:
- LTR-0841 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-1240 (32x12x4/?MB;SCSI)
- LTR-1210 (32x12x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-12101B (32x12x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-12102B/C (32x12x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-12102C (32x12x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-16101B/C (40x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-16102B/C (40x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-24102B (40x24x10/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-32123S (40x32x12/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-40125S (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-48125S (48x48x12/2MB;IDE, same as 48125W/48126S?)
- LTR-48246S (48x48x24/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-52246S (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
- LTR-52327S (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)
-
- Some of the drives appear to be based on Plextor units. It has been claimed
- that the LTR-0841 can be upgraded to an LTR-12101B with a firmware upgrade;
- see http://www.cdrinfo.com/Sections/Tips/oc_Lite-On.asp.
-
- Customer support issues are deferred to the dealer.
-
- There is an internal configuration program called "WSES" that can be
- used for testing drives and discs. Copies can be found on the web.
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-44] CenDyne
- (2004/03/25)
-
- See http://www.cendyne.com/
-
- Models are:
- CDI CD00000 (20x4x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00001 (20x4x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00015 (20x4x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00016 (24x4x2/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00017 (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00018 (32x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00023 (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00028 (32x12x4/4MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00029 (24x6x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00030 (24x6x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00032 (24x6x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00036 (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00037 (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00038 (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00039 (20x8/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00040 (24x6x4/2MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00045 (32x12x4/4MB;SCSI)
- CDI CD00047 (32x6x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00055 (32x12x10/4MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00056 (24x4x4/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00057 (32x8x8/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00059 (32x12x10/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx8)
- CDI CD00063 (32x12x10/?MB;Firewire)
- CDI CD00068 (20x4x4/?MB;PCMCIA)
- CDI CD00086 (20x4x4/?MB;USB)
- CDI CD00087 (40x16x10/?MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00090 (40x20x10/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00091 (40x24x10/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00092 (20x4x4/2MB;PCMCIA or USB)
- CDI CD00094 (40x24x10/2MB;FireWire)
- CDI CD00102 (32x12x10/2MB;USB2.0)
- CDI CD00103 (40x16x10/2MB;USB2.0)
- CDI CD00104 (40x24x10/2MB;USB2.0)
- CDI CD00107 (40x32x12/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00116 (24x8x8/2MB;USB2.0)
- CDI CD00117 (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00118 (48x48x12/?MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00122 (48x40x12/2MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00123 (40x16x10/2MB;IDE, read DVDx12)
- CDI CD00134 (40x40x12/2MB;USB2.0, top-loading)
- CDI CD00137 (48x48x12/?MB;IDE)
- CDI CD00154 (40x32x12/2MB;USB2.0)
- CDI CD00167 (40x32x10/2MB;IDE, read DVDx12)
- CDI CD00172 (48x40x12/2MB;USB2.0)
-
- [ CenDyne was acquired by Genica Corporation in December 2003. The range
- of products and services appears to be much smaller than before. ]
-
- All models are recorders built by major manufacturers, repackaged and
- supported by CenDyne. In many cases the model numbers refer to slight
- changes in packaging (e.g. Windows vs Mac) or internal vs external variations
- of the same drive.
-
- CenDyne has the distinction of using the least imaginative naming scheme
- of any distributor (the polar opposite of Waitec).
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-45] VST (SmartDisk)
- (2001/03/03)
-
- See http://www.vsttech.com/
-
- Models are:
- VST Portable CD-R/RW (20x4x4/2MB;FireWire;portable)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-46] ASUS
- (2002/10/14)
-
- See http://www.asus.com/
-
- Models are:
- CRW-4012A (48x40x12/2MB;IDE, "-U" model is external USB2.0)
- CRW-4816A (48x48x16/2MB;IDE)
- CRW-5224A (52x52x24/2MB;IDE)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-47] Samsung
- (2002/10/16)
-
- See http://www.samsung.com/
- See http://www.samsungelectronics.com/odd/
-
- Models are:
- SN-308B (24x8x8/2MB;IDE, read DVDx8)
- SM-308B (32x8x4/2MB;IDE, read DVDx8)
- SW-208B (32x8x4/2MB;IDE)
- SW-216B (32x16x10/2MB;IDE)
- SM-316B (40x16x10/8MB;IDE, read DVDx12)
- SW-224B (40x24x10/2MB;IDE)
- SM-332B (40x32x10/8MB;IDE, read DVDx12)
- SW-232B (40x32x10/8MB;IDE)
- SW-240B (40x40x12/8MB;IDE)
- SW-248B (48x48x16/8MB;IDE)
- SW-248F (48x48x24/8MB;IDE)
- SM-348B (48x48x24/8MB;IDE, read DVDx16)
-
-
- Subject: [5-1-48] APS
- (2003/03/25)
-
- See http://www.apstech.com/
-
- Models are:
- APS "52x24x52 FireWire & USB CD-RW" (52x52x24/?MB;FireWire & USB2.0)
-
- Products are repackaged drives from other manufacturers.
-
-
- Subject: [5-2] How long do CD recorders last?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- The MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) on these drives is typically 50,000
- to 100,000 hours, and they come with a 1 year warranty. Compare that to
- hard drives rated at between 500,000 and 1,000,000 hours with a 3 or 5 year
- warranty and that should give you some idea.
-
- Most of the drives available today weren't meant for mass production of
- CD-Rs. The only exceptions are the venerable Philips CDD 522, Kodak PCD 600,
- and Sony CDW-900E.
-
- Incidentally, MTBF is not an estimate of how long the drive will last.
- Rather, it's an estimate of the failure rate of the drives during the
- expected lifetime of the device. Once you exceed the expected lifetime,
- which is often on the order of a couple of years, the anticipated failure
- rate increases. If you have new drives with an MTBF of 25,000 hours, and
- you run 1000 units for 100 hours, you can expect to see four of them fail.
- It does NOT mean you can expect them to run for 2.8 years and then all fail
- at once.
-
-
- Subject: [5-3] What kind of PC is recommended?
- (1999/10/04)
-
- If you're about to buy a computer system and are seriously thinking about
- buying a CD-R, here are some things to keep in mind. (See the next section
- if you're interested in Mac hardware instead of an IBM PC.)
-
- CPU: buy a mid-range Pentium-class machine or better. In general it's a
- good idea to buy a fast machine, since systems tend to be outdated after a
- year and obsolete after three or four. A '486 is a *minimum* configuration
- for a CD-R system; a Pentium gives you some breathing room. Pentium II and
- above is more power than you need, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
-
- Motherboard: for SCSI, anything with PCI slots is fine. For IDE, anything
- above UDMA/33 is overkill. See section (5-15) for configuration notes
- and a warning about certain bus-mastering drivers.
-
- SCSI: the SCSI interface remains a popular choice for CD recorders and
- CD-ROM drives, though improvements like UDMA/133 are changing the way people
- build high-end computers. Whether it's built into the motherboard or on a
- separate card, make sure the host adapter supports ASPI and ASPI for Windows
- (see section (5-7)). Wide Ultra-SCSI is useful if you're buying a fast
- hard drive, but CD recorders don't move data fast enough to require it.
- Bus-mastering SCSI cards are preferred over non-bus-mastering cards,
- because they can move data to and from system memory directly, without
- the CPU's involvement, making things faster.
-
- Parallel: some vendors are selling parallel-port CD-R drives. You should
- have an EPP-enabled parallel port (if you have a Pentium or later, chances
- are you have one).
-
- Sound: the Creative Labs SB16 and AWE32 boards are widely supported and
- very popular, but if you're thinking seriously about recording sound
- through it, you'll want to consider alternatives. See sections (3-12)
- and (3-13) for other options.
-
- Hard drive: needs to be reasonably fast, and large enough to hold whatever
- data you plan to put on a CD. IDE hard drives work fine. See section
- (5-6) for more details.
-
- Video card and monitor: depends on what you want to do. A PCI-based video
- card is practically a requirement these days, and 17" monitors are
- inexpensive now. If you're planning on creating multimedia products, scale
- up.
-
- CD-ROM: SCSI and IDE both work, but some drives work better than others.
- See section (5-5).
-
-
- Subject: [5-4] What kind of Mac is recommended?
- (2002/01/11)
-
- Any Mac of Quadra 700 or higher capability with a reasonably fast disk should
- be suitable for 2x writing. All PowerMac-class machines, and probably
- most Mac clones, should work fine at high speeds. PowerBook users should
- proceed with caution on machines earlier than the 3400 and G3 models.
-
- Any of the SCSI or (for appropriately equipped machines) USB and FireWire
- recorders should work. Verify with the vendor of the software you plan
- to use that the drive you have in mind is supported. You may be able to
- use the internal IDE connector on some Macintoshes as well.
-
- Using the "simulated cut" feature available on Toast and other software is
- also prudent, at least until you get a feel for the system. Make sure you
- turn off file sharing before you start a burn, or things will fail if it
- tries to read a file that's already open. You may also have trouble
- writing from the boot/system volume, since it will always have files open.
-
- The good news for Mac owners is that the hardware and software
- configuration for CD-R usually goes rather smoothly.
-
-
- Subject: [5-5] Which standard CD-ROM drives work well with CD-R?
- (1999/09/12)
-
- Besides the obvious question - can it read CD-R discs that you create -
- there's also the question of how well the drive works as the source device
- when copying discs. To be more specific:
-
- - Does the drive support digital audio extraction?
- - Does the drive hog the SCSI bus, obstructing writes to the CD-R?
- - Does the drive support multisession discs?
-
- Plextor SCSI models generally work well. The Plextor 6Plex and higher can
- extract digital audio at high speeds, and come with a set of utilities that
- are actually useful. The 8Plex and more recent models are often
- recommended. The 12Plex can extract audio at about 9x, and the 12/20 will
- extract at up to 20x. The error correction on the 12/20 seems to slip a
- little above 8x though, so unless the disc is very clean you should extract
- at a slower speed. Many hard drives have trouble streaming data at that
- speed anyway.
-
- You can see speed and quality test results on http://come.to/cdspeed.
-
- Older NEC models tend to hog the SCSI bus. Older NEC, Mitsumi, and Acer
- models (e.g. NEC 3x and Acer 8x) may have trouble reading CD-Rs.
-
- There is one hard and fast rule for direct CD-to-CD duplication: the
- source drive must be faster than the target drive (e.g. source 4x if
- target is 2x, source 6x if target is 4x).
-
- A quick summary of features for several models can be found at:
- http://www.fwb.com/ts/cdt/cdt_support.html
-
-
- Subject: [5-6] What kind of HD should I use with CD-R? Must it be AV-rated?
- (2002/01/11)
-
- Any recent hard drive will work fine. Back in 1998 this was the subject
- of some concern, but modern drives are much faster and more intelligent.
-
- There is a fair amount of confusion over what exactly is an "AV drive". A
- brief discussion is presented here; for more information see Bertel
- Schmitt's article at http://www.fadden.com/doc/avdrive.txt.
-
- The most important issue is thermal recalibration. Older hard drives
- would pause for up to half a second (or even up to a full second, depending
- on who you believe) every so often to adjust the head positioning to the
- current operating temperature. For most applications this goes unnoticed,
- but when recording a CD-R you must write the current track to completion
- without interruption. "AV" drives deal with the problem in a way that
- doesn't disrupt the disk activity.
-
- A drive that does a quick thermal recalibration is acceptable if the system
- is otherwise fast enough or the buffer in the CD-R unit or in the recording
- software is large enough (early drives had only 64KB, while current drives
- have 2MB or 4MB, making it much less of an issue). You need to be sure
- that the recorder's write buffer won't empty during the recal period, or
- you'll end up with a buffer underrun.
-
- Most modern hard drives do smart thermal recalibration. This really isn't
- something you need to worry about anymore.
-
- What separated a Seagate Barracuda from a Seagate Barracuda AV is that the
- latter is tuned for AV performance. This was simply a software change
- that affected cache allocation algorithms, error correction, and other
- SCSI parameters to get better performance for transfers of large blocks
- of contiguous data. These sorts of optimizations were very important for
- digital video running at a few MB/sec, back when that was close to the
- maximum capability of the drives.
-
- If you think AV optimizations will help you, you should take a look at
- "Dr. SCSI" at http://www.scsitools.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [5-7] What SCSI adapter should I use with a CD recorder?
- (1999/10/20)
-
- Some systems have SCSI built in, some don't. This section is intended for
- PC users who want to add SCSI devices. Owners of SCSI-less Macintoshes
- should use an interface recommended by Apple.
-
- Using different SCSI adapters for the HD and the CD recorder used to be
- recommended, but should not be necessary with non-ISA adapters. If your
- recorder hogs the SCSI bus, though, the HD may not be able to keep the
- write buffer full. Under some operating systems, particularly OS/2,
- devices that support SCSI disconnect will work better than those that
- don't.
-
- In general, the faster the better. PCI or the (now uncommon) VLB is better
- than ISA, and the board should support (and have enabled) SCSI disconnect.
- It is not necessary to use Wide or Ultra SCSI for a CD recorder; the speed
- requirements for all existing recorders are easily met by "narrow" Fast
- SCSI. If you think you may be buying a speedy SCSI hard drive or other
- device in the near future, though, you may want to buy a card that supports
- faster protocols.
-
- You should enable synchronous transfers for devices that support it. Most
- CD recorders should. If the device doesn't work with it on, turn it off
- and try again.
-
- The adapter MUST support the ASPI standard (ASPI provides an interface
- between software and the SCSI controller) for both DOS and Windows.
-
- If you want to boot from a CD-ROM on a SCSI drive, make sure the SCSI card
- supports booting from removable media.
-
- For some tips on cabling and termination, see Bertel Schmitt's article
- at http://www.fadden.com/doc/scsi-trm.txt.
-
- The next few sections detail the more popular SCSI cards. There are
- many others, e.g:
-
- Advansys - http://www.advansys.com/
- DTC - http://www.datatechnology.com/
- CSC - http://www.corpsys.com/
-
-
- Subject: [5-7-1] Adaptec - 1510/1522A/1540/1542CF
- (1998/04/06)
-
- See http://www.adaptec.com/
-
- These are all ISA controllers, good for putting a CD recorder on, not so
- good for putting a hard drive or fast CD-ROM drive on. If you have an
- IDE-based system and just want a SCSI card for driving your CD recorder and
- maybe a scanner or tape drive, any of these (as well as any of the
- variations of these) will work fine.
-
-
- Subject: [5-7-2] Adaptec - 2840/2910/2920/2930/2940
- (1999/10/20)
-
- See http://www.adaptec.com/
- See http://www.adaptec.com/products/datasheets/specs/
-
- The Adaptec 2940 (PCI) is a popular choice -- if not *the* most popular
- choice -- though some users have reported problems with the Adaptec 2840
- (VLB). See the README that comes with Adaptec EZ-SCSI v4.0 and later for
- some important performance tests you can do with SCSIBench. The 2930 is
- also a good choice for CD recording.
-
- If you're having trouble writing CD-Rs with the 2940UW, go into the
- configuration menu (hit Ctrl-A while booting) and make sure the drive is
- set for 10MB/sec with Wide Negotiation disabled.
-
- A few notes on the 2910, 2920, 2930, and 2940 cards:
-
- 2910
- Bus-mastering, no BIOS, Fast SCSI-2.
- 2920A/B
- Not bus-mastering, has BIOS, Fast SCSI-2.
- 2920C
- Bus-mastering, has BIOS, Fast SCSI-2.
- 2930/U/U2
- Less expensive than 2940, but similar features.
- 2940/W/U/UW/U2/U2W
- Bus-mastering, has BIOS, fast/ultra/wide/whatever depending on model.
-
- Booting from a CD-ROM requires that the card have a BIOS that supports
- booting from CD-ROM, and that the PC also supports booting from CD-ROM.
-
- The 2940U2W has four connectors (internal 68pin Ultra2-LVD, internal 68pin
- Ultra2, internal 50-pin, external 68-pin Ultra2) and comes with a special
- 50-pin cable that ends in a 50-pin (HD) external plate. So you can have
- both 50-pin and 68-pin external connectors, as well as 50-pin and 68-pin
- internal connectors. On previous cards, you could only use two connectors
- at a time, but on this card you can use all five at once.
-
-
- Subject: [5-7-3] ASUS - SC-200/SC-875
- (2000/02/11)
-
- See http://www.asus.com.tw/
-
- The ASUS SC-200 is one example of a Symbios Logic 810-based card (in this
- case, the NCR 53C810). Such cards offer solid performance at a reasonable
- price, and may be a better choice than the Adaptec cards for many users.
- (Be sure to examine these types of cards closely though: the least expensive
- among them are only meant to work with a motherboard BIOS that supports SCSI.
- This could cause trouble on other motherboards if you wanted to boot from
- a SCSI hard drive.)
-
- The ASUS SC-875, based on the 53C875 chip, offers Wide SCSI connectors as
- well.
-
- Symbios Logic is currently owned by LSI Logic. For product information,
- see http://www.lsilogic.com/products/io_standard/index.html.
-
-
- Subject: [5-7-4] Tekram - DC-390U/DC-390F
- (2000/02/11)
-
- See http://www.tekram.com/hot_products.asp?Product=DC-390_Series
-
- Inexpensive SCSI cards based on the LSI Logic SYM53C875 chip. The DC-390U
- supports Ultra SCSI, while the DC-390F supports Wide Ultra SCSI.
-
-
- Subject: [5-7-5] Adaptec - 1350/1460/1480
- (1999/12/18)
-
- See http://www.adaptec.com/
-
- The "SlimSCSI" 1460 and 1480 are PCMCIA SCSI adapters for use in laptops
- and other portable devices. The 1460 requires a PC card slot and supports
- SCSI-2, while the 1480 requires a CardBus slot and supports UltraSCSI
- devices.
-
- The "MiniSCSI" 1350 allows you to connect SCSI devices to your parallel
- port. If you use this you will be limited to parallel-port speeds, so
- you may not be able to record at more than 2x.
-
-
- Subject: [5-8] Can I use a CD recorder as a general-purpose reader?
- (2002/12/14)
-
- You can, though there may be reasons not to. The seek times tend to be
- slower than a standard CD-ROM drive because the head assembly is heavier.
- Early CD recorders were optimized for writing, which doesn't require
- fast seeks, and some users experienced jerky video playback as a result.
- Most current models have pretty good seek times though (about 100ms vs.
- 80ms for a playback-only drive).
-
- The MTBF on CD-R units has historically been lower than that of CD-ROM
- drives, so it may be wise to use a different drive for general use to
- preserve the life of the CD-R. Now that CD recorders are cheap enough to
- be nearly disposable, though, there's not much point in worrying about them.
- See also section (5-27) on laser diode lifetime.
-
-
- (What follows are instructions for getting some of the early consumer CD
- recorders to work as CD-ROM drives. You shouldn't need to worry about
- any of this unless you bought an old drive in an auction.)
-
- If you're using Win95, some older CD recorders don't show up as readers
- without additional drivers, or (for SCSI drives) show up as 8 separate
- LUNs. (LUNs are Logical UNits, useful for distinguishing between different
- items loaded in a CD jukebox.) The reason why some older recorders don't
- show up by default is that they're classified as "type 4" SCSI-2 devices,
- which is used to indicate write-once devices. Standard CD-ROM drives are
- "type 5".
-
- HP and Philips used to supply drivers for their older units, and
- Corel used to supply several drivers for with their CD Creator
- product. You used to be able to get get a patch from Adaptec at
- ftp://ftp.adaptec.com/pub/BBS/win95/cdr4up.exe that would allow many type
- 4 drives, including the Yamaha CDR-100/102 and JVC XR-W2010, to appear as
- CD-ROM drives, but it appears to be gone. You may be able to find these
- archived on the web.
-
- If you don't have the drivers, you can still old SCSI drives to work
- under Win9X by loading the real-mode drivers like this (example is for an
- Adaptec 2940):
-
- In Config.sys:
- DEVICEHIGH=C:\SCSI\ASPI8DOS.SYS /D
- DEVICEHIGH=C:\SCSI\ASPICD.SYS /D:ASPICD0
-
- In Autoexec.bat:
- LH C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MSCDEX.EXE /D:ASPICD0 /M:12
-
- Incidentally, to *remove* the Adaptec cdr4up driver, you should remove
- the file "CDR4VSD.VXD" from \Windows\System\Iosubsys, and reboot.
-
- For IDE recorders, you need a more specific driver. The manufacturer's
- web page likely has a link. See also http://www.drivershq.com/ and
- http://www.windrivers.com/.
-
-
- Subject: [5-9] To caddy or not to caddy?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- This is a general CD-ROM question rather than a CD-R question, but since
- some of the newer recorders are available in either configuration it
- seems worthwhile to address it here.
-
- The advantage of a tray is convenience. If you want to put a CD in the
- drive, you can just drop it in, instead of buying a pile of caddies and
- hunting for a free one.
-
- The advantage of a caddy is durability. CDs are less likely to be
- scratched if they're put into a caddy and left there (VERY important if
- you have children), and the internal mechanism is less likely to collect
- dust. The tray units usually have a worse MTBF rating, because they have
- more moving parts.
-
- There have been reports that, at 12x and higher, some CDs will cause loud
- vibrations in tray models, but work fine in caddy models. Not everyone
- has had this problem though.
-
- It used to be the case that you had to get a caddy drive if you wanted to
- mount it sideways, but many tray models have tabs that will hold the CD in
- place. Having to use the tabs does reduce the convenience normally offered
- by a tray model though.
-
- Which you should choose depends on your needs and circumstances. If you
- are planning to write to a disc several times (multisession, packet
- writing, or anything with CD-RW), you are better off with the disc in a
- caddy.
-
-
- Subject: [5-10] Can I burn CDs from a Jaz drive? Tape drive?
- (1998/04/06)
-
- With a little extra care, yes. For a Jaz drive, defragmenting the drive
- right before starting a burn seems to be the key to success. It's also
- very important to ensure that nothing else is trying to access the drive
- while the write is underway.
-
- One user reported being able to write at 1x from a DDS tape drive using
- Seagate's Direct Tape Access, but this isn't recommended. Copying the data
- to a hard drive and doing the burn from there is much more likely to
- succeed.
-
- There are no known instances of successful CD-R burns using punched card
- readers as the source device.
-
- Doing a test run is strongly recommended when using any of these devices.
-
-
- Subject: [5-11] What is "Running OPC"?
- (2003/12/02)
-
- OPC stands for Optimum Power Control (or Optimum Power Calibration,
- depending on who you believe; the process is sometimes known as Dynamic
- Power Control (DPC) or Direct Read During Write (DRDW)). Most CD-R units
- do a power calibration test before writing to adjust the laser power to the
- correct strength. Different brands of media and different recording speeds
- require slightly different power levels. Too much power can create oversized
- marks which can interfere with each other, and too little power can produce
- undersized marks which, in extreme instances, can cause read failures.
-
- The recorder reads a recommendation for the initial power level from the
- Recommended Optimum Recording Power value from the ATIP (section (2-38))
- on the disc. This is used as a starting point for a series of write tests
- in the Power Calibration Area (PCA) of the disc.
-
- Running OPC goes a step farther by actively monitoring the write process
- and adjusting the laser power as needed. If the writer encounters dust or
- fingerprints, the laser power can be increased to burn through the
- obstacles. This is especially useful for discs that are moved around
- between recording sessions, such as CD-RW discs or multisession CD-Rs.
-
- For more information, see the OSTA white paper on the subject
- at http://www.osta.org/specs/pdf/opc.pdf. Another good site is
- http://www.mscience.com/faq64.html.
-
-
- Subject: [5-12] What's the story with stand-alone audio CD recorders?
- (2002/02/27)
-
- Audio CD-R/CD-RW recorders are similar to computer CD-Rs, except that
- they're intended to be part of a recording system rather than attached to a
- Mac or PC. They have audio inputs and front-panel controls like you'd find
- on a tape deck. They are usually more expensive than CD-Rs meant for
- computers. Some CD-Rs have both audio and SCSI-II interfaces.
-
- There are two classes of audio CD-R, consumer and professional. The units
- targeted at consumers require special audio blanks, and employ SCMS (Serial
- Copy Management System, section (2-25)) to prevent making copies from a
- copy. The audio blanks used to be 4x to 5x the cost of computer CD-R
- blanks and only held 60 minutes of audio, but 74-minute "Consumer Audio"
- blanks are now available for moderately more than regular CD-R blanks.
-
- The "professional" units use regular CD-R blanks and don't obey SCMS, and
- generally have a wider set of features and input/output connectors.
-
- If you already have a computer, it's probably cheaper to buy a computer
- CD-R and a good sound card or digital transfer card (see sections (3-12)
- and (3-13) for more info). The ability to edit the sound on a computer
- before writing a CD can be very useful. However, there are some advantages
- to using an audio CD-R (not all features are present on all models):
-
- - much easier to configure the hardware, and no software to learn
- - the A/D converter is probably better than most PC sound cards
- - automatic DAT start_id to CD index mark conversion
- - sample rate conversion for 32K - 48K DATs
- - analog inputs
- - pause button
- - buffer underruns are unlikely
-
- Of course, if you're recording the music "live", it has to happen at 1x,
- and any skips or pauses in the audio input will show up on the duplicate.
- Depending on your situation, this may not be a problem.
-
- You can't copy data CD-ROMs with an audio-only recorder.
-
- (Incidentally, the difference in price for the audio CD-R blanks is due
- to licensing agreements and volume. The manufacturer pays a royalty to
- a studio consortium under the assumption that everything recorded to an
- audio CD-R is pirated material. The technology is identical; the "audio"
- discs just have a mark that says a royalty has been paid. See also
- section (7-17).)
-
- It is theoretically possible to convince a "consumer" audio CD recorder to
- accept regular blanks, but in practice this requires modifying the hardware.
- Some dealers will sell modified units, with altered firmware or additional
- circuitry, for a higher price (and perhaps a separate warranty). With the
- Philips 870/880 units manufactured prior to November 1998, it's possible
- to trick the recorder by manually ejecting and replacing the disc right
- before recording. Some of the "code free DVD" sites also sell CD-R chips,
- e.g. http://www.dvdupgrades.ch/. See also section (7-18).
-
-
- (And now for some increasingly outdated examples...)
-
- Examples of "consumer" audio CD-R units are the Pioneer PDR-04 and
- PDR-05 (http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/).
-
- Marantz makes professional-grade CD-R units, e.g. the CDR615 and CDR620.
-
- Philips sells the CDR870 and CDR880 (based on the CDD3600), which support
- both CD-R and CD-RW media. http://www.acdr.philips.com/products.htm.
- If you're interested in the Philips CDR765, a consumer-grade dual CD deck,
- see a detailed article at http://www.gallagher.com/music/cdr.htm and some
- notes at http://members.tripod.com/~charleswolff/cdr765.html.
-
- HHB sells a "professional" unit, the CDR880. http://www.hhb.co.uk/.
-
- There are many other models and vendors -- Denon, Harmon Kardon, others.
- Shop around.
-
-
- Subject: [5-13] What's firmware? How and why should I upgrade my recorder?
- (2002/10/15)
-
- In computer terms, hardware is the stuff you can hit with a baseball bat,
- and software is the stuff you can only swear at. Firmware is software that
- lives on your hardware. In more concrete terms, the firmware on your CD
- recorder is what controls the operation of the device, and handles
- everything from decoding CD-ROM sectors to writing the disc table of
- contents.
-
- Sometimes there are bugs or missing features that are added by updates.
- Firmware upgrades have been used to add features like disc-at-once
- recording and fix bugs like reversed left and right audio channels.
- Sometimes the upgrade will inadvertently add bugs, causing the recorder to
- work improperly.
-
- Firmware can be stored in an umodifiable form, such as a ROM chip, or in a
- rewritable form, such as "flash" ROM. In the former case, firmware
- upgrades are accomplished by physically removing a chip from inside the
- device, and replacing it with a new one. Devices with "flashable"
- firmware, on the other hand, can be upgraded by downloading a new set of
- firmware over the Internet.
-
- You have to be careful when upgrading the firmware on a drive yourself. If
- it requires physical replacement, you run the risk of breaking pins off of
- the chip. Flash upgrades won't result in physical damage, but in some
- cases a failed upgrade can render the device unusable. Always follow the
- instructions exactly, and NEVER do an upgrade with anything that didn't
- come from the manufacturer or a trusted source.
-
-
- Suppose you want to upgrade your recorder. The first step is to remember
- famous words of wisdom: if it ain't broke, don't fix it!
-
- The second step is to figure out if your firmware is upgradeable. The
- manual should tell you. Most drives are, but some exceptions are noted for
- specific drives in the subsections under (5-1).
-
- The third step is to determine what version of firmware you currently
- have. Some SCSI cards on PC or UNIX systems will display a list of
- attached devices when the system boots. There's usually a column with a
- version number in it.
-
- On a PC running Win95, go into the Device Manager (either from the Control
- Panels or by asking for Properties on My Computer), and find the CD-ROM
- drives in the device tree. Select the CD-R drive, hit the "Properties"
- button, and then click on the "Settings" Tab of the window that opens.
- Look for "Firmware Revision".
-
- Mac users with Toast can hit Command-R to display the information. If your
- software doesn't have such a feature, you will need to run SCSI Tools to
- check the identification string.
-
- The fourth step is to find the upgrade file. Usually the manufacturer's
- web site will have them. If not, sometimes you can find a repository on
- the web. (There was a nice one on http://www.ahead.de/en/firmware.htm,
- but that appears to be gone now.)
-
- The fifth step is to apply the upgrade. This can be trivial or fairly
- challenging, depending on the device. Be sure to read the instructions
- *carefully* before applying the upgrade -- if it fails, the recorder could
- be rendered inoperable.
-
- Section (5-24) discusses the somewhat dangerous practice of flashing a
- drive with firmware intended for a different drive.
-
-
- Subject: [5-14] How well do parallel-port, USB, and 1394 recorders work?
- (2002/05/04)
-
- By all accounts, they work just fine. Most such drives are IDE devices
- with a converter (e.g. an enclosure with a parallel-to-IDE converter).
-
- Parallel-port drives require an ECP/EPP parallel port, which most (all?)
- machines have. Some BIOSs allow you to switch between ECP/EPP and
- "standard" mode; if you're having trouble, be sure it's set correctly.
-
- Some people who have bought off-the-shelf parallel-to-IDE converters have
- found that writing at 4x doesn't work very well. This may account for
- why all drives that ship with parallel port support are 2x writers.
-
- USB recorders work fine at 4x when connected directly to the computer.
- You may need to reduce speed to 2x if you use a hub. Some people have
- reported that their Windows systems were crashing until they turned
- auto-insert notification off (see section (4-1-1)). Windows users should be
- running Win98 or later -- Win95b may or may not work. Be warned that some
- USB SmartMedia readers install drivers that interfere with the ASPI layer;
- if you have problems with one, uninstall the drivers for the device and
- run ASPICHK.
-
- You need USB 2.0 to take advantage of drives faster than 6x4x4. Support
- for USB 2.0 has been spotty, but as of mid-2002 it's becoming more
- common on new motherboards and software support is improving.
-
- A PC user with USB 2.0 ports discovered that their recorder would only work
- successfully under WinXP or Win2K. Older versions of Windows wouldn't work.
-
- If you're having problems when disconnecting a device from the USB hub,
- see http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q253/6/97.ASP.
-
- IEEE 1394 (FireWire/i.Link) devices should only be used with recent
- versions of Windows on PCs (e.g. Win98SE or Win2K, not Win95, Win98,
- or WinNT). Linux support for 1394 was still listed as "experimental"
- in early 2002.
-
-
- Some personal notes on FireWire:
-
- I bought a Western Digital PCI 1394 card, an ADS Technologies Pyro 1394
- Drive Kit, and an HP DVD100i CD/DVD+RW recorder with an IDE interface.
- As an experiment, I put the HP recorder into the ADS case, and plugged
- it in.
-
- Under Windows 98SE, I was able to use the drive as a CD-ROM reader and DVD
- video player. The HP software got a little confused during installation,
- claiming that it couldn't find the drive, but when asked to record a CD it
- was able to find the device. However, neither the HP RecordNow software
- nor Nero was able to successfully record an audio CD. The drive just
- stopped working a few minutes in.
-
- When the drive was subsequently connected to the IDE bus, it worked fine.
- Subsequent experiments showed that the problem appears to be some sort of
- incompatibility with the motherboard -- my VIA-based Soyo K7V Dragon+ seems
- to be incompatible with 1394 devices. I haven't tried the experiment,
- but my guess is that the recorder would've worked just fine in the ADS
- case on a compatible system.
-
- For the curious, http://www.fadden.com/techmisc/my-pcs.htm#1394 has the
- gory details on what I went through.
-
-
- Subject: [5-15] How should I configure my system for an ATAPI CD recorder?
- (2001/02/16)
-
- (This section assumes you're using a PC.)
-
- You generally want the hard drives and CD-ROM drives on different channels,
- or CD-ROM accesses can interfere with hard drive accesses. Most older
- devices can't share the ATA bus, so only one device can be active at a time.
-
- For example, suppose you have a hard drive as master and a CD recorder as
- slave on the same channel. If you issue a command to write some blocks
- to the CD recorder, the system can't read anything from the hard drive
- until the CD write request completes. As long as the system is fast
- enough, and can read enough data between writes to keep the CD recorder's
- buffer full, this doesn't create any problems.
-
- If you put the hard drive and the CD recorder on different channels,
- the commands are allowed to overlap. In practice, on Win9x systems this
- doesn't make much of a difference, because Win9x won't usually access
- more than one IDE device at a time. On systems like OS/2 and Linux,
- the difference is more significant.
-
- Proposals for command overlap (sending commands to multiple devices
- simultaneously) and command queueing (sending several commands to the
- same device all at once) were introduced as optional features during the
- development of the ATA-3 specification. They're part of ATA/ATAPI 4.
- For command overlap to be effective, both devices on the channel must
- support the feature. If the hard drive does but the CD recorder doesn't,
- you won't get much benefit.
-
- If you're not sure that your CD recorder has an ATAPI-4 interface, you
- probably ought to put it on a separate channel from the hard drive.
- For information related to this topic, see "Does an old HD or CDROM
- slow down a new drive?", in section 5.3 of the IDE/Fast-ATA FAQ at
- http://www.faqs.org/faqs/pc-hardware-faq/enhanced-IDE/part1/.
-
- The recommended configuration looks like this:
-
- primary channel:
- master: first hard drive
- slave: (optional) second hard drive
- secondary channel:
- master: CD-ROM drive
- slave: CD-R/CD-RW drive
-
- It doesn't seem to matter whether the CD-ROM or CD recorder is the master.
- If you use the CD recorder as your only CD-ROM drive, make it the master.
-
- Having the CD-ROM drive and the CD recorder on the same channel doesn't
- necessarily prevent CD-to-CD copying, but you're still better off writing
- from the hard drive. At high speeds, the CPU utilization for CD-ROM drives
- without DMA enabled can be very high.
-
- Keep the cables as short as you can. Sometimes the longer (60cm) cables
- will work fine with one drive but start having integrity problems when two
- devices are attached.
-
- NOTE: early versions of the Intel PIIX Bus Mastering IDE driver may
- interfere with the ability to use a CD recorder. The typical symptom
- is a system hang when writing or test-writing to a disc. The latest
- version of the Intel driver (which includes an uninstaller) can be
- found at http://developer.intel.com/design/chipsets/drivers/busmastr/.
- The Adaptec page http://www.adaptec.com/support/configuration/cdrecide.html
- also describes the problem.
-
- NOTE: early versions of the VIA Bus Mastering IDE drivers were similarly
- afflicted. See http://www.via.com.tw/support/faq.htm.
-
- Win95/Win98 users can resolve the bus-mastering IDE driver problems by
- installing Win98 Second Edition (a/k/a Win98SE) after removing any
- manufacturer-supplied bus-mastering drivers.
-
- The ASPI (Advanced SCSI Programmer's Interface) layer is used during CD
- recording, even for IDE recorders. See section (4-44) for information on
- how to make sure you have what you need. The original Win95A/B WinASPI
- may have problems with IDE recorders.
-
-
- Subject: [5-15-1] Should I have DMA enabled for an ATAPI recorder in Windows?
- (2002/12/23)
-
- Maybe. In an ideal world, the answer would be a resounding "yes". However,
- some drives in some configurations will not work correctly, so the right
- answer is "try it and see". If you are having lots of problems getting a
- drive to work, turn it off. If you're running with it off, and are having
- performance problems, turn it on.
-
- As with any other "try and see" procedure, don't change more than one thing
- at a time. For example, don't rearrange your drives and toggle DMA without
- doing some testing in between. Otherwise, if something breaks, you won't
- know which change caused it.
-
- Under Win98, you can toggle the DMA setting by opening the Control Panel
- window, double-clicking on System, selecting the "System Properties" tab,
- expanding the "CDROM" branch, selecting the device, clicking on "Properties",
- clicking on "Settings", and then checking or unchecking the "DMA" checkbox.
- Under Win2K, you can set DMA on a per-channel basis. Under WinXP, select
- the adapter that the drive is on rather than the drive. Other versions of
- Windows may require registry tweaks.
-
- Sometimes Win2K and WinXP will revert to PIO mode when a number of DMA
- errors are detected. See http://www.microsoft.com/hwdev/tech/storage/IDE-DMA.asp
- and http://www.gmayor.dsl.pipex.com/cd_writer_udma_mode.htm for details.
-
-
- Subject: [5-16] How important is CD-RW?
- (2001/03/18)
-
- It depends on what you're doing. CD-R media is incredibly cheap these days,
- so using CD-RW to burn a a test disc doesn't make much sense unless you're
- burning a *lot* of test discs. Besides, CD-RW discs aren't readable on
- many older CD-ROM and audio CD players.
-
- The manual for Easy CD Creator Deluxe v3 says that CD-RW discs are
- "more cost effective for near-line data storage requirements than CD-R."
- The definition of near-line storage puts it somewhere between online
- storage and offline storage.
-
- On the other hand, if you're expecting to use packet writing to treat the
- disc as a big floppy, it may be useful. You should consider other forms of
- media for such purposes though, such as Jaz drives, which are faster and
- hold more, but are slightly harder to find readers for (but only slightly:
- CD-RW discs aren't readable on all drives, and packet-written discs may not
- be readable under some operating systems).
-
- Software developers who need to create test CDs frequently will find CD-RW
- invaluable.
-
- CD-Rewritable drives can write to both CD-R and CD-RW media, and because
- the differences in drive construction are so slight, nearly all recent
- recorders support both formats.
-
-
- Subject: [5-17] What is an "MMC Compliant" recorder?
- (2000/11/28)
-
- Historically, each manufacturer of CD recorders used a different command
- set, and perhaps even altered the commands with each new recorder. This
- has placed a significant burden on CD-R software authors, who have to
- write new drivers for each new device.
-
- MMC (Multi Media Command) compliant recorders use a common command set.
- Programs that can write to one MMC-compliant recorder should be able to
- write to all others, and consumers should be able to use their choice of
- software without the long delays usually associated with the introduction
- of new hardware.
-
- The reality is not so kind, unfortunately, due to firmware bugs or
- deliberate deviations from the standard. Do not assume that a particular
- piece of software will work with your recorder simply because it works for
- other MMC-compliant devices.
-
- The spec sheets for recorders usually indicate whether or not the drive
- is MMC compliant.
-
- The MMC-2 standard is documented in ANSI/NCITS 333-2000. You can buy a
- copy of the standard from http://www.ncits.org/ (specifically,
- http://www.techstreet.com/cgi-bin/detail?product_id=223931).
-
-
- Subject: [5-18] What do I need to record on a UNIX (Linux, Solaris, etc) system?
- (2001/05/06)
-
- The choice of what hardware to buy is dictated by software availability.
- Find the software you want to use (common choices include "cdrecord",
- listed in section (6-1-20), GEAR in section (6-1-3), and CDR Publisher in
- section (6-1-9)). All support a variety of recorders, primarily SCSI
- devices.
-
- Consult the software manufacturer's web site for any specific
- recommendations.
-
- It's possible to get IDE recorders working under Linux, by installing
- an "ide-scsi" module that makes the recorder work more or less like
- a SCSI device. This is similar to what the Windows ASPI layer does
- for IDE devices. See the CD-Writing HOWTO for more details (try
- http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/CD-Writing-HOWTO.html).
-
- The Sun CD FAQ at http://www.datamodl.demon.co.uk/suncd/ has some
- helpful tips on using CD recorders and creating bootable CD-ROMs for
- Solaris machines.
-
-
- Subject: [5-19] What do I need for recording CDs from a laptop?
- (2001/03/03)
-
- You need a way to connect the recorder to the laptop. After that, it's
- really no different from a desktop.
-
- You can connect a typical recorder via USB (if you have a USB connector),
- SCSI (if you have a port or want to buy a PCMCIA SCSI card like the
- Adaptec 1460), FireWire (if supported or you have a PCMCIA 1394 card),
- or parallel port. SCSI is the fastest, but PCMCIA SCSI adapters tend
- to be expensive. FireWire is the next best bet. USB is a good choice,
- and should be available on most recent laptops, but you're limited to
- recording at 6x or less with USB v1.x.. Parallel port works fine, but
- you will probably be limited to recording at 2x.
-
- A small selection of portable CD recorders is now available. These are small,
- battery-powered devices that come with a PCMCIA connection. Examples include
- the Ricoh MP-8040SE and Smart & Friendly Pocket RW.
-
- In some cases it may be possible to replace the CD-ROM drive included in
- the laptop with a CD recorder.
-
- Search section (5-1) for "portable" devices.
-
-
- Subject: [5-20] I need to make *lots* of copies
- (1999/12/09)
-
- If the software options described in section (3-17) are insufficient, you
- may want to buy dedicated hardware. You can learn about the types of
- equipment available at http://www.octave.com/library/cdduplicating.html.
-
-
- Subject: [5-21] How do I connect two drives to one sound card in a PC?
- (2001/03/03)
-
- The purchase of a CD recorder often results in what used to be an unusual
- situation: a machine with two CD-ROM drives in it. This leads to a
- number of interesting phenomena, usually having to do with poorly-written
- software that can't figure out which CD-ROM drive it's supposed to use.
-
- CD-ROM drives are typically connected to a sound card via a small cable
- (a couple of wires twisted together, ending in small molex connectors).
- This allows audio CDs to be placed in the CD-ROM drive and played through
- the speakers attached to the sound card. Some people, upon discovering
- that they have two CD-ROM drives and can use both simultaneously, want to
- connect both drives to the sound card's input.
-
- This is where the trouble starts. Sound cards often only have one input.
- The immediate temptation is to buy or construct a Y-cable, but this won't
- always work. The trouble is that Y-cables only work when you have a single
- signal and more than one listener, like a stereo that sends its output to
- two sets of headphones. The situation with two CD-ROM drives is of two
- outputs and one listener.
-
- Connecting two outputs together is, in general, a bad idea. Remember that
- electricity isn't like water: it does not come out of the output and flow
- downhill. The voltage at any point on the wire (ignoring minor
- distortions) is going to be exactly the same. So if you have a device
- that's trying to set it to one level, and another device that's trying to
- set it to another level, the two devices are going to fight, and the
- results aren't going to be what you want.
-
- In some cases, if a device is inactive, it will allow its output to
- "float". The other device can set the voltage to whatever level it wants.
- So long as you only use one device at a time, all is well. Many devices,
- however, force the output to ground level when not in use. This generally
- manifests as a volume level that is almost inaudibly quiet.
-
- Devices that combine multiple audio inputs into something reasonable are
- called "mixers". Buying one and embedding it into your PC case is probably
- not the best solution.
-
- One possible option, if you're handy with the soldering iron, is to rig up a
- mechanical switch that selects which signal gets passed to the sound card.
- So long as you weren't planning to play two audio CDs simultaneously,
- this should work well.
-
- Some sound cards have multiple connectors on them, suggesting that the card
- itself could handle multiple inputs. More often than not, these connectors
- are not electrically isolated, so even though they're not sharing the same
- cable they will still cause the devices to compete. If the sound card
- isn't advertised as allowing multiple independent inputs, don't assume it
- can.
-
- Some of the Sound Blaster cards, e.g. SB Live!, do have two independent
- inputs ("CD in" and "AUX"). Stay away from the TAD (Telephone Answering
- Device) connector though, it's monaural. You may need to un-mute the
- auxilliary input in the volume control panel.
-
- You can get an inexpensive Y-cable with a "passive mixer" from "Cables N
- Mor" at http://cablesnmor.com/cdrom.html. If you're the build-it-yourself
- type, some instructions for building a similar cable can be found on
- http://outreach.math.wisc.edu/local/miscellany/mixer.htm.
-
-
- Subject: [5-22] How fast is 1x? What are CAV, CLV, PCAV, and ZCLV?
- (2004/03/03)
-
- A player spinning a CD at 1x reads 75 sectors per second. On a CD-ROM,
- where a sector has 2048 bytes, this is exactly 150KB/sec. On an audio CD,
- with 2352 bytes per sector, this works out to about 172.27KB/sec. (Note for
- the nit-pickers: the actual bit rate is considerably higher, because of EFM,
- CIRC, L2 ECC, and other magic acronyms. The channel bit rate is 4.3218MHz.
- See Ken Pohlmann's _Principles of Digital Audio_, 4th edition, page 249.)
-
- In terms of revolutions per minute, the answer varies depending on which
- part of the CD is being read. At 1x, the speed at which bits flow under
- the read head (the "linear velocity") needs to be fairly constant. You can
- get more bits in a circle at the outside of the disc than you can in a
- circle at the inside of the disc, because the circumference is greater.
- This means that the disc needs to spin more slowly (reduced "angular
- velocity") at the outside than it does at the inside.
-
- To play an audio CD, you always want to be reading at 1x. This means you
- need a constant linear velocity that gives you 172.27KB/sec. The angular
- velocity changes as you move toward the outside of the disc.
-
- To read files from a CD-ROM, you want to be reading as fast as you can.
- This means you'd like to maintain a constant angular velocity, spinning
- as fast as the spindle can go, with a linear velocity that increases as
- you move out to the outside of the disc. This is why a drive like the
- Plextor 12/20 reads at 12x at the start of the disc and 20x near the end.
-
- In practice, there is a maximum angular velocity because of physical
- constraints, and a maximum linear velocity because of hardware and software
- constraints. This results in drives that use constant angular velocity
- for the first part of the disc, but limit themsleves to a maximum linear
- velocity. As the read head moves further out on the disc, the drive
- switches to constant linear velocity mode.
-
- Devices that always spin at the same rate are called CAV (Constant Angular
- Velocity) drives. Devices that maintain a fixed linear velocity are called
- CLV (Constant Linear Velocity) drives. Devices that switch from CAV to CLV
- when the maximum speed is reached are called PCAV (Partial Constant Angular
- Velocity) drives. Most of the recent high-speed CD-ROM drives are PCAV.
- Devices that are CLV, but use different speeds on different parts ("zones")
- of the disc, are called ZCLV. Most CD recorders use CLV while writing,
- but some (e.g. 20x and higher) use PCAV or ZCLV.
-
- See http://www.plextor.be/english/technical/zoneclv.html for a graph
- illustrating ZCLV. http://www.cdspeed2000.com/go.php3?link=faq_general.html
- has some nice charts showing CDSpeed output on different drive types.
-
- You can compute how long it will take to record a disc with a CLV drive by
- taking the amount of data and dividing it by the record speed of the drive.
- A 74-minute disc will take about 19 minutes to record at 4x and a little
- under 10 minutes at 8x. With a PCAV drive, this calculation is no longer
- valid, because the velocity changes as the write head moves outward.
-
- In terms of actual rotational speeds, a disc being read at 1x spins at
- about 530rpm when reading near the center of the disc, slowing to about
- 200rpm at the outer edge. The linear velocity is constant, ranging from
- 1.2 m/s to 1.4 m/s depending on the disc. Discs with longer playing times
- (e.g. 74 minute discs vs 60 minute discs) use the slower velocity.
-
- It has been stated that, at a rotational speed equivalent to about 50x
- at the inside of a disc, the polycarbonate starts to deform and the disc
- becomes unreadable. Experiments (e.g. an episode of the "Mythbusters"
- TV show from 2003) have demonstrated that discs will warp when they get up
- around 25,000 to 30,000 RPMs. However, recent 52x drives only read data
- that quickly from the outside of the disc, actually reading at about 21x
- near the inside. This requires a speed of 10,000 to 12,000 RPM, which is
- safe for discs in good condition. Reading at 52x from the very inside of
- the disc would require a speed of about 27,500 RPM, and read data at 137x
- near the outside.
-
- Discs with minor defects can and will shatter at these speeds, so some
- care must be taken with drives rated at 40x and above. See section (7-25)
- for more information.
-
- An unbalanced disc can cause noisy vibrations in high speed drives.
- Some devices will actually reduce the spindle speed if the vibrations
- become too severe.
-
- Incidentally, "1x" on a DVD-ROM drive is 1353KB/sec, which is roughly 9x
- the speed of a "1x" CD-ROM drive. A 16x DVD-ROM drive reads at a speed
- equivalent to a 144x CD-ROM drive! The DVD doesn't actually spin 9x as
- fast, though, because the DVD "bit density" is higher. The drive can read
- roughly three times more data in a single revolution from a DVD than it
- can from a CD. (Incidentally, the 1353KB/sec figure comes from the DVD
- maximum user data rate of 11.08Mbps, where the 'M' is 1000*1000.) For
- more details, see http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html#4.2.
-
-
- Subject: [5-23] Will playing CD-Rs damage my CD player?
- (2002/06/24)
-
- Generally speaking, no, though warnings have started to appear.
-
- One proposed line of reasoning is that the lower reflectivity of CD-R media
- causes the laser to work too hard. This only makes sense for players
- with an AGC (Automatic Gain Control) circuit, in which the laser power
- adjusts automatically. This feature is generally found in newer players,
- because it's required for reliable playback of CD-RW discs.
-
- It seems unlikely that a player with an AGC would fry itself while running
- at a valid power level, unless the device were poorly constructed. In any
- event, the reflectivity of CD-R is close to that of CD -- if it weren't,
- CD-R would have the same playback compatibility problems that CD-RW has.
-
- The laser shouldn't have to work any harder to read CD-R. It's possible
- that some devices might "strain themselves" over CD-RW discs, but any
- device built to work with CD-RW should be able to handle the media without
- self-destructing.
-
- A more likely scenario relates to differences in physical dimensions.
- One car dealer claimed that CD-R media is too thin, causing their 6-disc
- changer to occasionally grab two discs and jam itself. On the opposite end
- of the spectrum, some "slot-in" dashboard players will get stuck ejecting
- a CD-R that has had an adhesive label added, because the disc is too thick.
-
- It's possible that the players with warnings simply don't support CD-R
- well for one reason or another. Rather than admit to poor construction,
- the manufacturers are trying to make it seem like there's something wrong
- with CD-R media.
-
-
- Subject: [5-24] Can I "overclock" my CD recorder?
- (2002/07/20)
-
- Not in the sense that you can make a slow drive work faster, but in some
- cases you can make a speed-limited drive work at its full capacity.
-
- Every drive model in a manufacturer's lineup costs additional money to
- make, because the manufacturing line has to maintain a larger inventory of
- parts and has to re-tool the assembly line whenever they switch production.
- In the world of high-volume, low-margin products, eliminating these costs can
- be a huge win. Changing hardware components also creates opportunities for
- things to fail, so every new hardware design must be extensively tested.
- (The above is true of many consumer electronics products, not just CD
- recorders.)
-
- Some manufacturers build a high-speed drive and then use firmware to limit
- the drive to slower speeds. There can be technical reasons for doing this
- -- it's possible the parts they're using don't work well or they haven't
- finished getting the firmware working well at higher speeds -- but often
- its for marketing reasons. The higher-speed drives can initially be sold
- at a higher cost. If you build a 20x-capable drive, you can sell it for
- more than the same drive limited to 12x performance. By selling the same
- drive as the 12x unit and the 20x unit, you're cutting manufacturing costs
- even if the 20x-capable parts cost slightly more.
-
- (CPU manufacturers typically build chips for a single speed and then sort
- them into speed bins based on how quickly they were able to run before
- they got flaky. The expensive "turbo" versions of your favorite graphics
- card are the same hardware as the base versions, but they ran at a faster
- speed without crashing. You're paying a premium for the performance
- boost, but it follows the laws of supply and demand: the chips that run
- at the highest speeds have the lowest yields, hence they cost more.)
-
- Computer overclockers like to push the boundaries of what their components
- can do by assuming that the chip manufacturers put some tolerances into
- the bin-sorting, meaning that they can run the chip faster than rated
- without it becoming unstable. Or at least not *too* unstable.
-
- With CD recorders, the speed differences might be due to hardware limitations
- or might be due strictly to marketing reasons. The common experience among
- "overclockers" is that the firmware change simply converts the drive from one
- kind to another. It's unclear, however, if such updates introduce more
- subtle problems, such as worsening the jitter present in audio recordings.
-
- It should be pointed out that updating your drive with firmware for a
- different drive is VERY DANGEROUS and could result in your drive being
- unreliable or irrevocably dead. You should not attempt to "overclock"
- your recorder unless you were planning to get rid of it anyway.
-
- Remember, this change only works on drives that were deliberately
- underpowered, so for many devices "overclocking" simply isn't an option.
- For details on performing these modifications to a variety of drives, see:
-
- - http://www.cdrinfo.com/Sections/Tips/oc_Hardware%20OC.asp
-
- Some other notes can be found here:
-
- - http://www.cdfreaks.com/news2.php3?ID=4169 (Lite-On)
- - http://www.cdfreaks.com/news2.php3?ID=4181 (LG)
- - http://www.cdfreaks.com/news2.php3?ID=4401 (Sony)
-
-
- Subject: [5-25] I need some help installing the drive
- (2002/10/04)
-
- When in doubt, read the manual. If a tech support phone number is
- included, call it. Read section (5-15) for information on IDE
- configuration for a PC.
-
- Yamaha has some interactive instructions for the PC on their site at
- http://www.yamaha-it.de/england/firststeps-english/index.htm. (The
- navigation is a little counter-intuitive, but it's okay once you
- get started.)
-
- The book _CD and DVD Recording for Dummies_ by Mark L. Chambers has a
- section on drive selection, installation, and troubleshooting. If you're
- new to CD recording, the software tutorials may be helpful as well.
-
-
- Subject: [5-26] How much power does a CD recorder use?
- (2003/04/12)
-
- About the same as a CD-ROM drive, even when recording. Some simple
- experiments suggest that the only significant power drain occurs when
- the disc is spinning up. Some personal notes follow.
-
-
- I connected an external Plexwriter 8/20 through a "Watts Up?" power meter.
- The Watts Up? device is designed for moderate loads (20W up to about 1700W)
- and isn't good at detecting small fluctuations, but it's accurate enough
- for this purpose. I connected the CD recorder and a fan drawing 50W
- through the meter, and subtracted 50W from the results.
-
- When completely idle, the CD recorder and its power supply draw 8-9W.
- Since the recorder isn't actually doing anything, I'm guessing most of
- this is loss in the power supply itself. In any event, it establishes an
- idle-load baseline.
-
- While playing an audio CD through the front panel headphone jack at 1X,
- there was no change in power usage.
-
- While playing an audio CD through Windows Media Player, the load increased
- to 9-10W. I got a similar drain while extracting audio at 8x with jitter
- correction and at 20x without jitter correction (about 13x actual speed,
- according to Nero). Recording a disc at 8x gave the same result.
-
- The only time I saw the recorder draw more than 10W (1-2W above idle)
- was during transitions. Inserting an audio CD gave a quick 16W pulse, and
- there were similar small blips at the start and end of recording the CD.
- Spinning up the spindle appears to draw an extra 6-7W over the idle load,
- but very briefly.
-
- A drive with a higher speed rating would draw more power while spinning
- up, but would probably use the same amount while actually doing work.
- While installing Linux on a different system with an Asus 52x CD-ROM drive,
- I noticed the load for the entire system went from around 50W when idle to
- a fairly stable 90W while doing CD media verification. How much of that
- was the drive and how much was the CPU is unclear -- the load on the system
- would go from 50W to 70W when quickly raising and lowering a window under
- X11 -- but it's clear that there's more to the story than the drive itself.
-
- My earlier hypothesis -- that CD recorders draw significantly more power
- when recording -- appears to be incorrect. There have been cases where
- people could do test writes but not actual writes, and solved the problem
- by upgrading their power supply. However, this appears to have more to
- do with the power supply's stability than changing load requirements.
- The power supply that fixed the problem may have been more reliable, or
- perhaps the old one was always overtaxed and the problem didn't manifest
- itself until something requiring precise power management was in use.
-
-
- Subject: [5-27] Will the laser in my drive wear out?
- (2002/12/02)
-
- Yes, eventually. Depending on a number of factors, though, it's quite
- possible that your device will suffer mechanical breakdown or simply
- become obsolete before that happens.
-
- There are many different ways to construct a laser diode. Different
- approaches result in different wavelengths, maximum power levels, and
- lifetimes. The lifetime of a laser is usually measured as MTTF (Mean
- Time To Failure) at a particular power level and ambient temperature
- (e.g. 10,000 hours at 5mW and 50 degrees Celsius).
-
- Higher power levels mean higher heat dissipation -- the optical conversion
- efficiency of a laser diode is around 30% -- and in the semiconductor world,
- more heat usually equates to shorter lifetime. Recording for an hour at high
- speed will take a greater toll on the laser than playing a CD for an hour.
-
- The bottom line is, there really isn't anything you can do to make the
- laser last longer. It'll last a very long time when used to read CDs,
- so there's no point in reserving the drive just for recording. It might
- last a little longer if you use lower recording speeds, but if you're
- willing to do that then why pay for a high-speed recorder?
-
- Sony Semiconductor's "Laser Diode Guide" is available from
- http://www.sony.net/Products/SC-HP/laser/guide.html.
-
- Laser diodes can suffer catastrophic failure (they suddenly stop working)
- or gradual degradation (reduced optical power for a given input power
- level). The power calibration sequence ((4-13), (5-11)) automatically
- adjusts the power supplied to the laser for a given disc and write speed,
- so reductions in output are compensated for automatically. However,
- if the laser's efficiency is reduced, more DC power must be supplied,
- more heat is generated, and the likelihood of failure increases.
-
- For a discussion of laser diode reliability, see
- http://www.bostonlaserinc.com/art1.php.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [ continued in part 4 of the FAQ ]
-
-