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LiteOnGuy wrote:Interesting... So there are both correctable and uncorrectable types of C2 errors?
LiteOnGuy wrote:The MRW formatting could have confused CD Doctor.
KCK wrote:Frankly, right now I don't know if I can learn anything useful by running CD Doctor or K's Probe on CD-MRW discs. Maybe CD-
MRW needs special treatment.
cfitz wrote:LiteOnGuy wrote:The MRW formatting could have confused CD Doctor.KCK wrote:Frankly, right now I don't know if I can learn anything useful by running CD Doctor or K's Probe on CD-MRW discs. Maybe CD-
MRW needs special treatment.
That is a possibility. Would any of you be willing to take the exact CD-MRW disc, full erase it, burn an ISO-9660 format disc on it, test it, then return it back to CD-MRW and test again, that might tell us something.
cfitz
CD-MRW (Case 4)
No. of C2-errs Sample Count
0 2998
4 1
5 1
7 2
8 117 <----------
9 1
11 1
15 1
16 2
17 6
18 3
38 7
39 5
UDF (Case 3)
No. of C2-errs Sample Count
0 3340
2 1
7 5
8 14 <----------
16 1
30 1
34 1
39 1
MediumRare wrote:I left this post here instead of putting it in the K's Probe thread because it was inpired by the happenings here.
cfitz wrote:The C2 "errors" are much more regularly spaced for the Mt. Rainier case than the UDF case. I wonder, can you correlate the spikes of C2 "errors" on the UDF disc with the number of files, directories, or drag-and-drop operations you stored/performed?
cfitz wrote:I hope we aren't overwhelming Karr. Maybe it is just as well to leave this here for now.
MediumRare wrote:I'm sure this isn't an arcane secret if the proper data sheets or specifications are available.
MediumRare wrote:I tend to rely on "black box" observations and try to find systematic trends or inconsistencies in data presented- it's the (theoretical) physicist in me.
cfitz wrote:Agreed. But isn't that true for so much of what we post here?
cfitz wrote:Don't theoretical physicists just sit in their offices and ponder the equations written on the blackboard?
cfitz wrote:What is your field of study within the broader domain of physics?
MediumRare wrote:But if you've done physics, it really influences the way you think. I like to get to the basics, and understand how and why things really work.
KCK wrote:Thus it might be useful to run K's Probe on an empty CD-MRW disc. Don't forget that background formatting may take several minutes (probably 4 or 5 on your drive); you can check via Nero | Recorder | Medium Info.
No. of files 0 1 2 7 11
Size (MiB) 0 47.1 94.1 330. 500.
Samples 3169 3101 3128 3124 3119
C2 > 0 7 61 74 161 187
C2 = 0 3162 3040 3054 2963 2932
max C2 17 61 40 83 46
C2 = 7 0 19 24 57 61
8 5 2 2 4 3
14 0 3 3 4 4
15 1 8 10 22 25
16 0 7 7 24 29
17 1 11 14 26 38
18 0 3 3 14 14
24 0 3 4 3 3
KCK wrote:MediumRare:
Again, thanks for your hard work. As for the FAQ attribution, I hope Inertia won't mind (I don't!).
guess most of what we are seeing in these pictures is systematic rather than random in the sense that the C2 patterns are due to data structures (links between blocks, etc.), with relatively small random distortions introduced by the usual "physical" causes of C2 errors (if any).
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