Shinman,
nah, you didn't bug me. I'm just using this forum as a method to my madness: namely trying to understand measurement issues.
When there are arguments which I don't share on all points, I try to present counterarguments. Usually I learn this way.
So, it wasn't directed at you as a person and I really appreciate you for writing and commenting on the benq review.
I don't pretend to be an expert on this issue either, but I want to learn more and it's much easier if we discuss these things together.
I know I'm often too terse and can come off as aggressive in my writings, but that's just the surface , believe me :) I'm trying to be as accurate in my expression as possible and to formulate exact questions. Often I fail to consider how other people will see my writings. I really hope I could write in Finnish, I'd have much less misunderstandings :)
So, apologies, if you felt I was attacking you.
Back to topic of BenQ and measurements:
shimman wrote:it is true that there are other things that can affect pi/po & jitter, but other things you mentioned are from disks themselves (if not most).
Probably most are from the discs themselves. However, as I stated elsewhere, there are at least three different reader characteristics that greatly influence how much jitter a reader sees on a particular disc.
There are no absolute reference standards on how to calibrate these three characteristics.
This is the reason why some drives see more jitter than others when all drives scan just one particular disc.
it is the burner's ability to cope with those things. i think that's why many are trying to find which drives are better dvd burners.
Perfectly understandable (to try and find what is a good burner).
However, our current kProbe scans, do not enable us to really decide whether the disc was good, the burner was good or the reader was good (or some combintion of these).
When we have a lousy test result from an MCC disc burned with BenQ and scanned on LiteOn 812, we can say that MCC media burned at that speed with BenQ (using current firmware) is not very compatible with LiteOn 812 (using the read speed/firmware of the LiteOn tested).
It doesn't really prove us something generalisable/universal about the burn quality, disc quality or the burner quality itself.
Sometimes pretty safe conclusions can be drawn, if kprobe measurements are done and supplanted with other measurements from various other types of drives (non-LiteOn).
i think that's why k's probe is popular as an indication to tell how good the burning process is. the values probably off from what engineers see, but high values of pi/po errors reported from k's probe probably indicates low quality burning process.
Again, this is not proven and in fact, a lot of examples show that it is impossible to safely draw conclusions like this.
KProbe can tell you that a certain burn is either problematic or non-problematic (or something in between) using the drive in which you tested it.
It doesn't prove anything universal about the burner quality or even necessarily the media quality in general.
It doesn't even necessarily tell anything very useful about the _general_ quality of the particular burn.
It just tells, whether LiteOn drive liked it or not.
There are cases, where a certain burned disc reads really bad on a LiteOn, but works/measures really well on other drives.
What does it then tell about the burn? About the burner? About the media? About the readers?
It's very hard to draw any reliable conclusions or to put the blame simply on the media, burner or even the reader.
Simple kProbe measurements are not enough for this type of analysis.
if most dvd burners/readers have similar reading abilities, i don't think end users need worry about whether burnt disks are rigorously adhering to the dvd standard.
And herein lies the problem: those dvd burners/readers have quite differing reading capabilities as I've explained above.
Even such thing as jitter tolerance can be almost twice as high on some drives when compared to lesser ones. In addition, drives may see more jitter due to differing reasons.
This can have a huge effec on how the drive is capable of reading various discs.
i don't mind if my burnt disks can be read by most dvd burners/readers without any problem even if those disks are not adhering to the dvd standard rigorously
This quote brings up another interesting point I must make:
There is no single universal truthful measurement tool/method that proves compliance to dvd standards rigorously.
Not even Pulsetec (i.e. CATS/Datarius/etc).
Pulsetec is built on industry averages, using tight tolerances and with particular attention paid to calibration.
But there is no "metric standard" of dvd measurement towards this all dvd measurement equipment should aim for and based on the results of which all burns should be qualified.
All measurement drives are always calibrated to try and get as good performance as possible, but there are many ways to defined good performance, so different testers have different ways of achieving this.
Yes, Pulsetec based units are probably the best we have (currently), but they are still based on averages.
Or to put it in other ways: if I only had single measurement that I had to rely on, of course it would be a Pulsetec based analyzer.
However, I'd rather have multiple different transports doing the measurements, because this is more likely to reflect real world compliance / readability / compatibility.
There exists no way that I know of, to measure universal adherence to dvd standards (such as PIE, PIF, dc jitter), because those results are always a combination of a disc and the reader.
16x benq burner's k's probe looked impressive, but the reading transfer test was disappointing. then one more thing came in my mind; that was jitter; i think jitter is the culprit of slowing down of reading speed when pi/po errors are low. since errors are correctable, drives don't need to retry reading problematic area, but i think bad geometry of pits & lands can cause too much to cope for most dvd readers to read @ high speed.
Actually I believe in a somewhat different explanation.
As long as overall DC jitter remains sufficiently low, in most cases so does the causal error rate (of course there are exceptions).
BUT, when transfer rate graphs fail, this could be down due to focus/tracking errors, which force the reading drive to slow down.
After slowing down, focus and/or tracking is regained, and the low jitter shows in low causal measures even on equipment that doesn't have a high jitter tolerance.
But the above is a belief, I cannot prove it. You could be right as well.
even though 99% of population out there might not know or care about pi/po/jitter results; there were few cases when mfgs cheated benchmarks to impress fanatics like me and others. some infamous examples are ati/nvidia's anisotropic filter cheating & msi's cpu heat modulated auto overclocing & higher than rated fsb
Indeed. This is a good point.
I hope that manufacturers of dvd burners are not stupid enough to start optimizing for readability of the burns in LiteOn drives (in order to get good kprobe scores).
While this kind of "optimization" may be acceptable in visualization equipment, I don't think it has any place in data storage equipment, where reliability should be amongs the key factors (and not false benchmark performance).
So, let's hope that kProbe does not become the wrongly accepted standard of dvd burner "quality measurement" as it surely cannot cope that role by itself.
regards,
halcyon