10.3 Choosing a CD-ROM Drive
The
first consideration in choosing a CD-ROM drive is whether to buy a
DVD-ROM drive instead. If price is important—as it may be if
you are replacing a failed drive in an older system or building a new
system on a tight budget—you can save $25 or so by using a
CD-ROM drive. In those situations, consider the following issues:
- DTR
-
For
most applications, DTR is the most important performance
characteristic of a CD-ROM drive. DTR is most important if you use
the drive mainly for sequential data transfer, such as playing games
or loading software. Unless you have unusual needs, any name-brand
$25 ATAPI 40X or faster drive is more than sufficient for anything
you need to do.
- Average access time
-
Average access time is important if you
use the drive mainly for random access, such as searching databases.
Although access time and DTR are not inextricably related—it is
possible to build a drive with a fast actuator and a slow motor or
vice versa—there is a fair degree of
correlation. Typical inexpensive ATAPI drives may provide true 100 to
200 ms average access (although they are often marketed with inflated
average access performance numbers), while high-end drives,
particularly SCSI drives, may provide true 85 ms access. If you use
databases heavily, go with a high-end drive for its improved average
access. Otherwise, a typical ATAPI drive will do the job.
- Buffer size
-
Currently
available drives have buffers ranging from 64 KB to 512 KB or more.
All other things being equal, the drive with the larger buffer will
provide higher performance. But all other things are seldom equal,
and a drive with a smaller buffer from one manufacturer may
outperform a drive from another manufacturer that has a larger buffer
and otherwise identical specifications. We recommend treating buffer
size as a minor issue when choosing a drive. If a drive is available
in two models differing only in buffer size, and the price difference
is minor, go with the larger buffer. Otherwise, ignore buffer size.
- Interface
-
CD-ROM drives are readily available in
ATAPI/IDE, SCSI, USB, and parallel interfaces. The vast majority of
CD-ROM drives installed in systems or sold individually are ATAPI,
which is inexpensive and adequate for nearly any application. Make
sure any ATAPI drive you buy supports DMA (bus mastering) transfer
mode, which improves performance and greatly reduces CPU utilization.
SCSI drives typically cost $25 to $50 more than equivalent ATAPI
drives (in addition to the cost of the SCSI host adapter, if your
system is not already so equipped). Choose an ATAPI drive unless the
faster average access and higher sustained throughput typical of SCSI
drives is a factor (such as for high-speed CD duplication) or unless
the internal-only limitation of ATAPI is an issue.
- Internal versus external
-
ATAPI drives are internal-only. Parallel, USB, and FireWire drives
are external-only. SCSI drives are available in either form. External
drives typically sell at a $50 premium over similar internal models.
Choose an internal drive unless you have a notebook, you have no
externally accessible drive bays available in your desktop system, or
you need to share the drive among multiple PCs.
- Mounting method
-
Modern CD-ROM drives use tray mounting. Some older drives used caddy
mounting, in which each CD is more or less permanently inserted in a
protective cartridge called a caddy. In theory, tray mounting has two
drawbacks: the tray mechanism is less reliable than the caddy
mechanism, and the tray mechanism does not protect CDs from dust and
physical damage. In practice, caddies are expensive and more trouble
than they're worth. Some drives use a slot mounting
mechanism such as that used by dash-mounted car CD players. This is
in theory the best compromise, but few such drives are available, and
we have had enough reports of problems with slot mounting mechanisms
that we recommend avoiding them. Unless you have compelling reasons
to do otherwise, choose a drive that uses tray mounting.
- Formats and disc types supported
-
Format and disc type support were major issues when standards were
still developing. Some drives, for example, could not read Kodak
PhotoCD discs. Current drives support all formats and disc types you
are likely to need to read. Any drive you buy should support the
following:
- Formats
-
CD-DA, CD-ROM Mode 1; CD-ROM XA Mode 2, Form 1 and Form 2;
Multisession (PhotoCD, CD-Extra, CD-RW, CD-R) Mode 1 and 2; CD UDF
(variable packets)
- Disc type
-
ISO 9660-HFS; Rockridge; CD-I Bridge (PhotoCD, Video CD); CD-i; CD-i
Ready, CD-Extra (CD-Plus); Enhanced CD; CD-R; CD-RW; CD+G; CD-Midi;
CD-Text
- Digital audio extraction (DAE)
-
If you will use the CD-ROM drive as
a source drive for duplicating audio CDs to a CD-RW drive, make sure
the drive supports DAE, which is required to copy audio digitally.
All current CD-RW drives support DAE. Few CD-ROM drives shipped
before mid-1998 fully support DAE, although some models offer partial
DAE support.
A typical DAE-capable ATAPI CD-ROM drive supports DAE at only a small
fraction of its rated speed. For example, our elderly Toshiba
XM-6402B 32X ATAPI CD-ROM drive supports DAE at only about 6.8X. Many
pre-1999 DAE-capable ATAPI 24X to 36X drives support DAE at only 1X
or 2X. High-quality SCSI CD-ROM drives and ATAPI CD/DVD writers, such
as the Plextor models, support DAE at or near their rated read
speeds. Attempting to use DAE at a rate higher than the drive
supports yields a "Rice Krispies"
dupe—full of snaps, crackles, and pops (along with some
hissing). If this occurs, the only solution short of replacing the
CD-ROM drive is to set your CD-R drive to record at 2X or 1X.
In addition to DAE speed, the quality of DAE varies significantly
among drive types and models. In general, older DVD-ROM drives
provide mediocre DAE quality, although many recent models provide
perfect DAE, or nearly so. ATAPI CD-ROM drives vary, but most recent
name-brand models do a decent job of extracting audio. If you want
the absolute best available DAE quality, use a SCSI Plextor CD-ROM
drive.
The best way we know to test DAE speed and quality is the Nero CD
Speed utility, shown in Figure 10-5, which is a free
download from http://www.cdspeed2000.com/.
- CD-ROM versus DVD-ROM
-
Although CD-ROM drives are still sold, the widespread availability of
fast DVD-ROM drives at reasonable prices has greatly shrunk the
market for CD-ROM drives. Before you buy a CD-ROM drive, consider
buying a DVD-ROM drive instead. Modern DVD-ROM drives read all
standard CD formats, provide very high performance, and can (of
course) read DVD discs, something no CD-ROM drive can do. Although
there is still a place for high-end CD-ROM drives, primarily for
extracting digital audio and duplicating CDs, we think most people
who are considering buying an ATAPI CD-ROM drive would be better
served by spending $25 more for an equivalent DVD-ROM
drive.
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