KCK- I just reread my post and I mistakenly attributed your excellent FAQ to Inertia.
![:oops:](http://www.cdrlabs.com/forums/images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
Sorry about that. The tip on using " Nero | Recorder | Medium Info" to determine the formating status was good- thank you for that. Nero only starts on the second try when InCD has mounted a disk, and InCD won't start at all if Nero is still open after erasing the disk. I guess this is a reasonable behaviour.
Now I've done the incremental writes with InCD (Mount Rainier), followed each time by a scan with KProbe (took a while to evaluate it
![:o](http://www.cdrlabs.com/forums/images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
). There's too much information to reasonably present completely, so I picked 5 stages: the scans with 0,1,2,7 and 11 files. The C2-errors fill the entire scan starting at 8 files.
0 files, freshly formatted
1 file 47.1 MiB
2 files 94.1 MiB
7 files 330 MiB
11 files 500 MiB
This time, the numbers 7 and 15-17 play a big role, as shown in the table:
- Code: Select all
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
I left out a lot of C2-counts that were only represented once in the scan.
The dense cluster of C2-counts at ca. 8 min. shows up after the first file and does not change therafter. The same applies to further non-zero counts: in most (but not all) cases, they stay put after they first show up.
It's interesting to look at a postion with a 7-count for the various scans (12 in total). There
are occasional cases where this is missing in one scan, but shows up again in later ones, so with a bit of detective work, it should be possible to localize the LBA involved to several sectors, i.e. much better than one sample (75 sectors). I thought of using this as a clue to the sampling strategy that KProbe uses, but that question has pretty well been settled by Karr Wang's information in the main thread and I won't "break my head" (to translate a saying) with that anymore.
There is an incredible amount of data in these scans (more than would interest most people), so I'll stop for now.
G