detail information
| Posted by | Jan S. |
| Posted on | 14/11/04 17:20 |
| Number of views | 17336 |
The specifications of this drive tell us that it should write DVD+R at 16x, DVD-R discs at 12x, DVD+RW and DVD-RW at 4x speed. In this part we will measure the write time for various types of DVD+R/RW and DVD-R/RW discs. We do also focus on write quality and media compatibility.
DVD-Writing performance:
In this test we will measure the time for writing to DVD+R/-R discs. We used Nero burning Rom to burn an ISO compilation containing 4483Mb of data. We used the Disc-At-Once write method.

DVD+R

DVD-R
Look below for the results.
| Write DVD data discs | DVD+R | DVD-R |
| Plextor | 8m:01s | 14m:57s |
| NEC | 9m:34s | 9m:30s |
|
Lite-On |
8m:43s |
15m:07s |
|
Pioneer |
8m:45s |
8m:27s |
|
NU |
8m:02s |
14m:26s |
|
Lite-On |
8m:40s |
9m:29s |
|
BenQ |
8m:26s |
16m:13s |
|
BTC |
10m:34s |
10m:03s |
|
Philips |
8m:20s |
Not supported |
|
LaCie d2 |
9m:49s |
9m:44s |
|
Philips |
5m:53s |
8m:31s |
|
Samsung |
6m:33s |
7m:28s |
Write
quality:
You should first notice that this is not a scientific and
professional way to test the discs. But according to our testing done in recent
months, we would conclude that there is a clear link between the quality
reported when scanning the disc and the playability of the disc in different
devices. Also notice that different drives report different amounts of errors.
K-Probe was designed to work with Lite-On
DVD-Writers. So we recommend using a DVD-Writer from Lite-On, in this test
we use a Lite-On SOHW-832S DVD-Writer, as already said; remember that scans done with a Lite-On DVD-ROM or Lite-On combo drive
can't be compared with the results obtained with a Lite-On DVD-Writer. Also
remember that different PI/PO ECC sum settings along with different reading
speeds in K-Probe will affect the result, we use these
settings; PI
(Parity Inner) set
to summarize 8 ECC blocks, PO (Parity Outer) set to summarize 1 ECC
block, reading speed: 4X CLV (Constant Linear Velocity). Setting
the PI sum to 8 and the
But what is a good scan? That is a discussion that we don't think will end soon, as different drives report different amount of errors, some players is more picky about media than others, and so on. But as a comparison we present you with a scan from two pressed DVD discs:

This scan shows the
results from a pressed DVD-ROM disc (Baldur's Gate DVD-ROM).

This scan shows the result from a pressed DVD-Video disk (Indiana Jones and the last crusade). Notice the error jump when shifting to the second layer (the error level actually drops from the end of the first layer to the beginning of the second layer).
If you read below you will see that both the pressed DVD-discs are well within the standards.
Download the ECMA 267 Standard for DVD-ROM, the ECMA 337 Standard for DVD+R/RW and the ECMA 338 Standard for DVD-R/RW at http://www.ecma-international.org if you want to look at the standards for yourself. Here is some data from the ECMA standards (same for DVD-ROM, DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW):
Random errors:
A row of an ECC Block that has at least 1 byte in error
constitutes a PI error. In any 8
consecutive ECC Blocks
the total number of PI errors before correction shall not exceed
280.
Here we see what a PI error is defined as a row in an ECC block having 1 byte or more containing errors. And that the sum of PI errors in 8 ECC blocks after each other should not exceed 280 PI errors.
But what is a row and what is an ECC block? Again we refer
to the ECMA standards. We do not copy and paste everything but if interested,
look in the ECMA standards. A row is 182 bytes long where the last 10 bytes
contain PI (Parity Inner) information. An ECC block is 208 rows long where
the last 16 rows contain the
According to our tests the specified max PI-8 sum of 280 for good discs seems to be a good guideline, as some readers have problems reading discs when the PI-8 errors is over 300 and most players starts to have problems when the PI-8 error level reaches 600 or more.
But what are the
'If a row of an ECC Block as defined in 13.3 contains more than 5 erroneous bytes, the row is said to be 'PI-uncorrectable"."
In theory an ECC block may in the worst case have 208 PI uncorrectable errors since every ECC block is 208 rows long. But the ECMA 337 standard goes further and specifies the max amount of accepted PI uncorrectable errors allowed on a good disc:
'- In any ECC Block the number of PI-uncorrectable rows should not exceed 4."
This means that when the
But what makes a disc unreadable? A PO uncorrectable error
will make the disc unreadable, but K-Probe does not display the
Notice that there are other aspects such as disc reflectivity, jitter, tracking errors and so on that also will affect the readability of a DVD disc - but for this we do not have measuring equipment available.
And another note is that we have scanned the discs at 4X CLV speed, by lowering the speed to 2X(DVD-R/RW)/2.4X(DVD+R/RW) or 1X the amount of reported errors may drop on some discs. We scanned at 4X CLV due to lower speeds taking to much time.
To see if there is a connection between the reported amount of errors and readability of the discs we also include the reading curve from a Toshiba SD-M1802 16x DVD-ROM and Plextor DVDR PX-712A. Only the best of the best discs will be able to get a perfect reading curve, so our limit for good discs will be: A speed drop at the end is accepted, but the reading speed should not drop below 6x for longer periods (small dips below 6x are accepted).
Easier explanation on how
to read the test results.
Maybe this got too technical, and you are wondering what to look for in Kprobe reports?
Use this as a guideline for good discs:
PI(Parity Inner): No larger areas on the disc should exceed 280 PI-8 errors, do not worry too much about high single spikes that exceed 280.
As always; lower is better.
Look at the reading curve, some slowdowns is expected with most media, but the reading speed should not drop below 6x for longer periods (small dips below 6x are accepted).
DVD+R media compatibility
and write quality:




|
Brand: |
BenQ |
|
Manufacturer: |
Daxon Inc. |
|
Code: |
DAXON AZ2 |
|
Disc Type: |
DVD+R |
|
Capacity: |
4483MB |
|
Certified Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Speed: |
4x |
|
Write Time: |
13m:42s |
|
PI-8 errors Average/Sec: |
3.47 |
|
PI-8 uncorrectable errors( |
0.01 |
The writer started to write this media with 8x P-CAV, but
dropped down to 4x CLV when it reached the 8x mark. The KProbe result and the
reading curve are both good.

Emtec DVD+R 8x
Preliminary Samples

|
Brand: |
Emtech - Thanks to MPOTEC (D) for sending us this
media. |
|
Manufacturer: |
Opto Disc |
|
Code: |
OPTODISC OR8 |
|
Disc Type: |
DVD+R |
|
Capacity: |
4483MB |
|
Certified Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Time: |
13m:18s |
|
PI-8 errors Average/Sec: |
153.40 |
|
PI-8 uncorrectable errors( |
5.87 |
The writer started to write this media with 8x P-CAV too, but dropped down to 4x CLV when it reached the 8x mark. The KProbe result is bad - the reading curve looks ok, but as you can see it did not read the media back at 16x.


|
Brand: |
|
|
Manufacturer: |
Philips Electronics |
|
Code: |
PHILIPS C 16 |
|
Disc Type: |
DVD+R |
|
Capacity: |
4483MB |
|
Certified Speed: |
1x-16x |
|
Write Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Time: |
8m:15s |
|
PI-8 errors Average/Sec: |
1.83 |
|
PI-8 uncorrectable errors( |
0.01 |
This 16x certified media was only burned at 8x!! The Kprobe
result is very good and the reading curve is good too, except the slowdown at
the end.



|
Brand: |
MMORE - Thanks to MMORE (NL) for sending us this
media. |
|
Manufacturer: |
Moser Baer India Limited |
|
Code: |
MBIPG101 R04 |
|
Disc Type: |
DVD+R |
|
Capacity: |
4483MB |
|
Certified Speed: |
1x-8x |
|
Write Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Time: |
8m:15s |
|
PI-8 errors Average/Sec: |
12.75 |
|
PI-8 uncorrectable errors( |
0.05 |
The KProbe result is within the specifications and the reading curve is almost perfect.



|
Brand: |
Plextor |
|
Manufacturer: |
Taiyo Yuden Company Limited |
|
Code: |
YUDEN 000 T02 |
|
Disc Type: |
DVD+R |
|
Capacity: |
4483MB |
|
Certified Speed: |
8x |
|
Write Speed: |
|