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BuddhaTB wrote:What you have is a bad batch of Verbatim CD-RW disc. In two previous threads, there has been a large variation of quality between Verbatim CD-RW disc made in Singapore, India, and Mexico. The ones from Mexico and India seem to be of lower quality than the Verbatim CD-RW disc made in Singapore. I would check out the two following threads before trying to mess with your firmware. I have used the TDK 52x drive before on my Verbatim CD-RW and they worked flawlessly with very few errors.
http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=9688
http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=9983
MediumRare wrote:tlotz- please note that the scan you saw was for a virgin disk and the error rate did go up for subsequent wites- not as high as the values you quoted, but to something like 10/100. Do have a look at this post: http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=59251#59251
G
cfitz wrote:Tlotz, try putting one of those discs through a few write/erase cycles. There have been some reports of these discs needing a little seasoning before the error rates settle down to lower levels. It is somewhat counterintuitive (particularly when I think about my Memorex CD-RW for which every write/erase cycle brought it one step closer to its very early death), but there could be something to it.
Also, although you aren't happy with your error rates, they are within specifications. More imporantly, despite the high C1 you still don't have any C2. That is a good sign.
Finally, rdgrimes reported a nice improvement in the burning quality of these discs at lower speeds (16x CLV) after updating to the latest LiteOn firmware. So you might well see good improvements if you do the same.
cfitz
cfitz wrote:The block error rate specification (BLER) is 220 per second maximum, averaged over a 10-second period. The C1 error rate doesn't translate directly into BLER, because a block(frame) includes more than one byte (24) and there are more than one type of C1 error. The exact number would depend on how the C1 errors are distributed throughout the blocks. And there is a little guesswork here because we aren't 100% sure that the C1 data charted in CD Doctor/WSES/K's Probe is measured in bad bytes/sec. But, C1 is a reasonable first approximation proxy to BLER, and your results are likely within specification.
Also, as I mentioned, you don't have any C2 errors, which is a good sign. Before WSES/CD Doctor/K's Probe no one would have even questioned the quality of your burns. You would have tested with CD Speed Scan Disc and, in all likelihood, would have found 100% green - qualifying for inclusion in the media compatibility thread. Of course, with new tools for evaluating burn quality we naturally want to do better.
By the way, in general you won't get error rates on CD-RW that are as good as those that you can get on CD-R.
Writing in TAO vs. DAO shouldn't make any difference to burn quality.
cfitz
MediumRare wrote:tlotz- please note that the scan you saw was for a virgin disk and the error rate did go up for subsequent wites- not as high as the values you quoted, but to something like 10/100. Do have a look at this post: http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=59251#59251
G
tlotz wrote:One of the Ultra Speed CD-RW discs is 99.88% green--the last block is marked unreadable. 0.00% are marked damaged. I've seen this before, including with my previous Plextor drive. Why does this occur?
tlotz wrote:So my audio disc, also a Verbatim Ultra Speed CD-RW disc Made in Taiwan 74 min disc, is better quality. Any ideas why?
cfitz wrote:tlotz wrote:One of the Ultra Speed CD-RW discs is 99.88% green--the last block is marked unreadable. 0.00% are marked damaged. I've seen this before, including with my previous Plextor drive. Why does this occur?
That's a side effect of not finalizing the disc when writing in TAO mode. It isn't a real error, and isn't something to worry about.tlotz wrote:So my audio disc, also a Verbatim Ultra Speed CD-RW disc Made in Taiwan 74 min disc, is better quality. Any ideas why?
Without seeing the actual chart, my first guess would be because you wrote less data to the audio disc. The more data you write, the closer you get to the edge of the disc where writing (and reading) becomes more difficult because the speeds are fastest and vibration worst.
And yes, I would say that your drive and media are operating properly.
cfitz
tlotz wrote:One question: is there any practicle reason to full erase CD-RW discs before writing to them?
Spazmogen wrote:My results were similar:
I restored my drive (LTR-52246S back to 6S08 as 6S0D is buggy. Very buggy).
MediumRare wrote:Spazmogen wrote:My results were similar:
I restored my drive (LTR-52246S back to 6S08 as 6S0D is buggy. Very buggy).
I think you're going back a bit too far. 6S0C came out at about the same time as SS0B for the 48x drive, and I've been very happy with that. I found, too, that it tremendously improved the burn quality of the 12x NanYa RWs. Your audio disk seems to indicate something similar for the Verbatim Ultraspeeds. I have an old scan for a 10x write (I think with SS06) that is nowhere near as good as this (max/ave: 20/5).
G
Spazmogen wrote:I have a hunch that too many flashes ( I think I did it about 4 or 5 x) was a bad thing for the drive using the Lite On Windows flash utility.
cfitz wrote:Like CD-RW media, EEPROM is also limited in the number erase/write cycles it can withstand. Typical claims of longevity range anywhere from 10,000 cycles to 1,000,000 cycles, although I've seen some as low as 1,000. And it wouldn't surprise me if these claims, like those of CD-RW media, are somewhat exaggerated. But still, it looks like EEPROM should outlast even the most avid flasher.
cfitz
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