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cfitz wrote:Erik, there have been a number of questions on CDRLabs regarding exactly what CD Speed measures with its scan disc and CD quality check features. Here is one example of a (somewhat excited) discussion that took place earlier:
http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=8194
If possible, could you please clear up this issue with definitive answers? Also, could you tell us your take on what constitutes C1 and C2 errors? I don't have any problem with the general nature of C1/C2 errors, but pinning down an exact definition of these terms is something I haven't been able to do:
http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic. ... 6820#46820
(The above link is from a discussion about CD Doctor and WSES, but the general nature of the question is the same.)
cfitz wrote:Finally, there have been rumors that the next version of CD Speed will include the ability to measure C1 and C2 errors (at least on supported drives). Can you confirm or deny this rumor?
ErikDeppe wrote:The yellow lines in the CD Quality check represent the number of C2 errors per second.
ErikDeppe wrote:So they're not very clear about this.
Basically the drive manufacturer decides which type of C2 error their drive returns.
ErikDeppe wrote:Most drives activate the C2 bit if the C2 decoder was unable to correct the corresponding byte.
This is the type of errors LiteOn drives are returning.
ErikDeppe wrote:CD Speed shows these errors as damaged in ScanDisc.
A red block (uncorrectable error) is shown if the drive was unable to read the sector.
For data discs this means that the ECC/EDC failed.
For audio discs it usually means that the disc was so badly damaged that the laser lost track.
The yellow lines in the CD Quality check represent the number of C2 errors per second.
ErikDeppe wrote:The comment you made in the first thread is very true. The results of such tests should be seen as relative comparison data.
ErikDeppe wrote:The upcoming release will indeed include a C1/C2 error test (actually an improved CD Quality Check).
Drive support may be limited in the first version but that should improve in future releases. Most drive manufacturers are very cooperative
spath wrote:Geee, I cannot believe you still doubt what a Cx error means... it's
like doubting what 'a red car' means just because you cannot find on
the internet a definition stating that 'a red car is a car whose color
is red'. Again, Cx errors are errors occuring at the Cx correction stage,
and each Cx error is either correctable or uncorrectable. Really you
should realize that 'one agreed definition, sometimes misused' is very
different from 'no agreed definition at all'.
spath wrote:At first look the original MMC definition can be interpreted in 5
different ways, so that different chipsets can actually report 5 different
values although they detected and corrected the very same errors.
cfitz wrote:usage probably varies by manufacturer.
So they're not very clear about this.
Basically the drive manufacturer decides which type of C2 error their drive returns.
Most drives activate the C2 bit if the C2 decoder was unable to correct the corresponding byte.
rdgrimes wrote:I've also seen CD Dr. and WSES fail to report any C2 on a disc where CDSpeed consistantly does report C2.
Ian wrote:ErikDeppe wrote:The yellow lines in the CD Quality check represent the number of C2 errors per second.
What about the red lines?
HazMat wrote:Erik, will there be support for C1 error test on ASUS drives in the next release? Thanks.
Guzo wrote:at spinning the drive (very beginning) it always report errors (cd speed)
but if i spin up the drive it doesn't report any error.
Could you give me explanation?
thanx
rdgrimes wrote:So they're not very clear about this.
Basically the drive manufacturer decides which type of C2 error their drive returns.
Most drives activate the C2 bit if the C2 decoder was unable to correct the corresponding byte.
If I understand this correctly, then the "testing" programs are simply counting the flagged bytes. This makes perfect sense, but what is interesting is the apparently consistant differences between WSES, CD Dr., and CDSpeed when measuring the same disc on the same drive. CD Dr, for example appears to start indicating C2 errors when the C1 rate reaches a certain point, while WSES does not. I've also seen CD Dr. and WSES fail to report any C2 on a disc where CDSpeed consistantly does report C2. So there must be more to this than just what the drive reports, the program must be interpreting to some degree.
jase wrote:So surely in order to get a true idea of how many C1/2 errors are on a disc you need to read at 1x?
spath wrote:> I'm interested to know people's opinion on the following: If a
> certain disc can't be read at 52x and CDD reports C2 errors
> toward the end of the disc, but at 8x the disc reads through
> fine with very low C1 error count (an example at
> http://jasejames.tripod.com/ritek.htm) can we say that disc
> has C2 errors?
No, you just cannot say that a disc has C1 or C2 errors : a disc
has physical properties/defects, which can cause C1/C2 errors
to be detected by the CIRC. But these errors depend on a lot
of parameters including the rotating speed, the brand of the
drive, its firmware, etc. In the end C1/C2 measures at low
and high speed are both valid, it just depends on what you
want to test.
HazMat wrote:Today I bought a 10-pack of Delphi 24x branded disks (ATIP says "Fornet International" - never heard of them, probably crap). After I burned the first disk at its rated speed (24x) on my Asus CRW4816 I did a Disk Quality Check with CDSpeed v1.02, as I do every time I buy a batch of new disks - the results indicated just short of a coaster - thousands of C2 errors, with a peak around minute 10, after which the drive dramatically slowed down and read the remainder of the CD with less errors (but still there were some). After that, I tested the same CD in my Asus CD-S500, a drive that (based only on CDSpeed Disk Quality Check) seems to be a better reader than the CRW4816. To my surprise, the disk showed even more errors, with a red line at minute 10. So far, so "good".
Hours later I visited a friend and used his TEAC 40x burner to check the bad disk, to see how it shows up. His drive just blasted full speed ahead, no errors and no slowdown (same version CDSpeed). I thought to myself "crap Asus???" No wait, here comes the best part:
When I returned home, I tested again the "bad" CD: only 35 errors with the CRW4816, none at minute 10, and no errors (zero) with the CD-S500, both drives read the CD at full speed... Can anyone explain this behaviour?
Great, isn't it? After being scared from the initial test, I burned the other CDs in the pack at 12x, to make sure they'll be readable...
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