11.5 Choosing a CD Writer
Use the
following guidelines when choosing a CD writer:
- Transfer rate
-
As with CD-ROM drives, throughput is
rated in comparison to standard CD-DA, which transfers 150 KB/s, and
is designated 1X. CD-(M)RW drives have three speeds. Usually, but not
always, the first number refers to how fast data can be written to a
CD-R disc, the second to how fast data can be written to a CD-RW
disc, and the third to how fast the drive can read data. For example,
a Plextor 48/24/48A writes CD-R discs at 48X, rewrites CD-RW discs at
24X, and reads discs at 48X. Note that fast CD writers use
"max" ratings. For example, the
PlexWriter 48/24/48A writes at 48Xmax, rather than writing at 48X
across the entire disc surface. Also, fast CD writers sometimes have
a lower maximum write speed for audio than for data. For example, a
drive might write data at 40Xmax, but CD-DA audio at only 24X.
- Average access
-
Most CD writers use heavier heads than
CD-ROM drives, and so may have relatively slow average access times.
For example, the Plextor 40/12/40A burner has an average access of
120 ms, much slower than the fastest CD-ROM drives. Some CD burners
shipped in 2002 or later have greatly improved average access times.
For example, the Plextor 48/24/48A has average access of only 65 ms.
If you use a burner primarily for duping CDs, average access is
relatively unimportant. If you use it heavily for reading CDs or for
packet writing, average access time is more important. Current models
range from about 65 ms to more than 300 ms average access. Buy a
model with average access of 100 ms or less.
- Interface
-
We used to tell readers that, all
other things being equal, creating CDs was less trouble-prone with
SCSI rather than ATAPI, and Windows 2000/XP rather than Windows 9X.
The second part of that advice remains true. CD burning is more
reliable under Windows 2000/XP than under Windows 98/SE/Me. But the
first part of that advice is obsolete. The best modern ATAPI drives,
such as the PlexWriter 48/24/48A, are at least as reliable as the
best SCSI CD burners. Nowadays, we regard SCSI CD burners as a niche
product. About the only situation in which they are still superior to
modern ATAPI burners is when you need to burn the same data to
several CD writers simultaneously, as in commercial short-run
duplication. If your needs are more typical, choose an ATAPI burner.
Make sure that any drive you buy supports at least UDMA-2 (ATA-33).
- Buffer size
-
Even on drives with
BURN-Proof or similar technology, a large buffer is desirable because
it helps prevent buffer underruns, whether or not those underruns are
intercepted and corrected. For maximum reliability, a CD burner
should have at least a 2 MB buffer, and 4 MB is better. Some current
models have only 1 MB, and a few 512 KB or less.
- Mt. Rainier support
-
Many drives do not support Mt. Rainier.
Make sure the one you buy does.
- Supported formats and methods
-
Any burner you buy should support at least the following:
- Read-mode formats
-
CD-DA (Audio CD), CD-ROM, CD-ROM/XA, Audio-combined CD-ROM, CD-I,
CD-I Ready, CD Bridge, Video CD, CD-Extra, CD-R (Orange Book Part
II), and CD-RW (Orange Book Part III)
- Write-mode formats
-
CD-DA (Audio CD), CD-ROM, CD-ROM/XA, Audio-combined CD-ROM, CD-I,
CD-I Ready, CD Bridge, Video CD, CD-Extra, CD-RW, and CD-MRW
- Writing methods
-
Disc-at-Once, Session-at-Once, Track-at-Once, multisession,
fixed-length packet writing, variable-length packet writing, and
Mount Rainier
- Software
-
The software you use is as important as the CD-R hardware. Nearly all
CD burners are bundled with various software, which is described in
the following section. Despite the fact that it's
"free," bundled software is not
always the best choice.
|