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[comp.publish.cdrom] CD-Recordable FAQ, Part 3/4
Section - [5] Hardware

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Top Document: [comp.publish.cdrom] CD-Recordable FAQ, Part 3/4
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See reader questions & answers on this topic! - Help others by sharing your knowledge

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
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.yamaha.com/
See http://yamaha-it.de/

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
(2004/12/10)

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)
  CRX230AD/K (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)
  CRX300A (48x48x24/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
  CRX320A/U (52x52x32/2MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)
  [ There are also a number of DVD recorders that also record CD-R/RW ]

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
(2004/12/22)

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 problems 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 compensate the members of the class, either by replacing the
defective drive with a newer model (which, unfortunately, was IDE instead
of SCSI) or paying money to those who had bought a replacement drive and
could document the expense.


Subject: [5-1-5] Hewlett-Packard (HP)
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.hp.com/
See http://www.hp.com/united-states/cdwriter/index.html

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 ??)
  cd52i (52x52x32/?MB;IDE, 'e' is external)

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)).  You can also
just use the Sony firmware, but that causes the front LEDs to stop working.

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 was filed against HP (for the HP4020i and HP6020i)
by the same people who filed the suit against Philips -- the drives were
repackaged versions of the CDD2000 and CDD2600.


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
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.jvc.com/

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)

[ JVC stopped selling CD recorders somewhere around 2002. ]

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
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.ricoh.com/

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)

[ Ricoh stopped selling CD recorders somewhere around 2002. ]
  
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
(2004/12/20)

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)
  DW552G (52x52x32/?MB;IDE, reads DVDx16)

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
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.creative.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 ??)
  CD-RW 52.24.52 (52x52x24/?MB;IDE)
  CD-RW 52-32-52x (52x52x32/?MB;IDE)

Creative sold several drives with the 32x8x4 rating, starting with
the Plextor-based 8432.  According to some information [formerly at]
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/

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)
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.benq.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)
  5232W (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)
  
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)
  [ See also the "Action" line of DVD/CD recorders. ]


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)
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.sanyo.com/

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)

[ Sanyo stopped selling CD recorders somewhere around 2002. ]

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
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.pacificdigital.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)
  Blue Lightning52 (52x52x24/?MB;IDE)
  [ Some DVD/CD recorders are also available. ]


Subject: [5-1-38] Iomega
(2004/12/10)

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)
  CD-RW 52x32x52 USB (52x52x32/?MB;USB2.0)


Subject: [5-1-39] Goldstar (LG Electronics)
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.lge.com/
See http://www.lge.co.kr/
See http://www.lgservice.com/

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)
  GCE-8525B (52x52x32/2MB;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
(2004/12/10)

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)
  [ Some DVD/CD recorders are also available. ]


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/

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)
  52/24/48 veloCD (52x48x24/2MB;IDE)


Subject: [5-1-43] Lite-On
(2004/12/10)

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)
  [ Combo DVD/CD recorders are also available. ]

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)
  CRW-5232AS (52x52x32/2MB;IDE)


Subject: [5-1-47] Samsung 
(2004/12/10)

See http://www.samsung.com/

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)
  SW-252 (52x52x24/2MB;IDE, retail version has 8MB buffer)
  [ Some DVD/CD recorders are also available. ]


Subject: [5-1-48] APS / LaCie
(2003/03/25)

See http://www.lacie.com/

Models are:
  APS "52x24x52 FireWire & USB CD-RW" (52x52x24/?MB;FireWire & USB2.0)

[ APS was purchased by LaCie in 1998. ]

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/ 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 get 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?
(2008/04/29)

Yes.  If your drive is in PIO mode you can get bad results when recording
or ripping audio.  (PIO is "Programmed Input/Output".  The computer has
to sit and wait for small I/O operations to complete, instead of handing
the drive a big data buffer and letting the drive manage things.  DMA,
"Direct Memory Access", is much more efficient than PIO.)

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.com/cd_writer_udma_mode.htm for details.

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.  Win2K, WinXP, and later versions of Windows have
the setting in a similar location.  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.


On 1990s-era hardware and software, the answer was more of a "maybe".  The
rest of this section is "historical".

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.


Subject: [5-16] How important is CD-RW?
(2004/06/20)

This was an interesting question back in the early part of 2001, when
CD-RW support was not present in all drives.  All CD recorders made today
support both CD-R and CD-RW media.  However, the question is still of some
academic interest, so the original answer follows.


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.


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
auxiliary 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://www.math.wisc.edu/~wilson/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 themselves 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/tec/catalog/laser.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 ]

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Last Update March 27 2014 @ 02:11 PM