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Re: [ARSCLIST] CD writing speed
David Seubert wrote:
We've burned a lot of different brands of media on our systems at
different speeds in an unscientific test and run them through a Clover
to test for errors. Almost without exception burning at 12x resulted in
the fewest errors. Others I've talked to have anecdotally confirmed
this, but this is just one system, one drive, etc.
I hope I am not misusing my privilege to participate, but let me confirm
the result David reports for my own system and for many others that are
reported to me.
I find on my Plextor (CD) and Pioneer (DVD / CD) drives, 12x is optimal
for writing CDs of all sorts. 16x is near enough for data and sometimes
used for speed and convenience. That has proved to be true on all
quality media. Writing at 8x is acceptable but distinctly inferior; 4x
and below have grossly unacceptable error rates.
I have read reports that the Plexwriter 8x drives are considered the
best made for home use. I have one and agree that it is excellent when
fed the right media, but today's blanks are a bit happier at 12x, the
Plexwriter I use routinely (the 1210s) offers buffer underrun protection
not on the 8x drives, and is in practice a better choice for me.
One anecdote may be of interest on the matter of rated speed. When Kodak
stopped producing media, I purchased quantities of their blanks in three
forms. As I recall they were: spindles rated 20x, thin cases rated 24x,
conventional cases rated 32x. Nothing I could do with any of those discs
distinguished it from any other: the ATIPs were identical, none having a
maximum speed set, and error rates matched both near optimum and at
lower speeds. It appears that the claim of maximum speed was part of the
justification for different pricing and not in any way related to the
production of the disc.
Mike
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mrichter@xxxxxxx
http://www.mrichter.com/