Sony BDU-X10S detail information
| Posted by | Doug Schwantes |
| Posted on | 21/03/08 16:23 |
| Number of views | 5191 |
| Manufacturer | Sony |
| Product | Sony BDU-X10S |
| Description | The BDU-X10S 2x Blu-ray Disc BD-ROM Drive |
Positive
- Drive runs very quiet
- Excellent build quality
- Native SATA connection
- Excellent bundle
- Accurate audio extraction quality
- Includes power and data cables
- Consistent reading speeds
Negative
- Slower reading of CD-R, DVD± and DVD± DL media by today’s standards
- Doesn't read DVD-RAM

Let us summarize the most important positive and negative points below:
The main positive points: Following our tests we found that this drive is a "Solid" Blu-ray Reader; the drive also supports reading of CD-R/RW, DVD±DVD to include DL media. Reading of BD media though is the most important feature of the Sony BDU-X10S and the drive was very consistent over all the discs we tested posting steady 2x read speeds. The drive has native SATA connections and worked without a hitch in Windows Vista. The Sony BDU-X10S has a solid feel and good build quality; during normal operation the drive was surprisingly quiet.
The main negative points: While not a major negative we would like to see faster read speeds with BD, CD and DVD medias.
So to sum it all up, this is what we would say: “If you are looking for a well built Blu-ray reader with native SATA support that works out of the box with Windows Vista the Sony BDU-X10S will not disappoint you.”
Here in the US we have found the drive listed at www.newegg.com for $199.99; March 2008.
You may discuss/comment this review below or in this thread.
Thanks to:
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Verbatim USA – For providing the media used in this review. |
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Maxell USA – For providing the media used in this review. |
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Memorex USA – For providing the media used in this review. |
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Rima.com USA – For providing Taiyo Yuden media used in this review. |
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Advanced Media/Ritek-USA – For providing the media used in this review. |

A format for encoding analog input signals called SESF has been established in response to demands for a format that enables users to dub video recorded on VTR and reuse streams that are encoded for DVD. In addition to HD digital broadcasts, SESF makes it possible to play/record current analog broadcasts efficiently. It also provides compatibility between BD devices. SESF conforms to the MPEG-2 TS systems standard (ISO/IEC 13818-1). SESF is limited to the streams that are required for encoding NTSC (or PAL) video input signals. The standard MPEG decoders such as BS digital receivers can be used to decode the video stream of SESF.
SESF recorded streams are defined as audio, video and teletext streams. The elementary data of SESF are audio (MPEG-1 audio), video (MEPG-2 video), dolby (AC-3 audio), linear (PCM audio), teletext (supported for PAL), tip data (Tip TS).
Video signals with the resolutions given below can be used and NTSC and PAL video signals are guaranteed to be recorded at sufficient resolutions
720 x 480 ,704 x 480, 544 x 480, 480 x 480, 352 x 480, 352 x 240 (Resolution under 525/60)
720 x 576 ,704 x 576, 544 x 576, 480 x 576, 352 x 576, 352 x 288 (Resolution under 625/50)
The NTSC signals can be recorded at a maximum resolution of 720x480 pixels, which is equivalent to that of DVD packaged media.
For further details and online order, please visit www.tape4backup.com




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