While CPU, memory, OS and other variables don't often make a huge difference, there are some nonetheless. We have a computer that is used only for testing hardware. We do this so all tests can be compared reliably.
Test System:
CPU: | AMD Athlon 64 3200+ 2.0GHz | |
Motherboard: | ASUS K8V SE Deluxe with BIOS 1003 | |
Memory: | 2 x 256MB Kingston PC3200 | |
Video Card: | XFX NVIDIA GeForce FX5200 - ForceWare v56.72 | |
Hard Drive: | Hitachi Deskstar 7K80 80GB SATA 7200RPM | |
Operating System: | Windows XP SP1 - VIA Hyperion 4in1 v4.51 |
For DVD writers the performance tests are broken down into four sections: CD read, CD write, DVD read and DVD write tests. Each benchmark test has been run three times. The score given is an average of the three. DMA has been enabled in device manager for all IDE devices supporting it.
CD Read Tests: For the read performance section of the CD-ROM benchmarks, CD WinBench 99 v3.0 and CD Speed v4.01 are used to test read speeds, seek times and CPU usage. For DAE testing both CD Speed and CD DAE are used. CD Speed is used to give an overall DAE speed rating and CD DAE is used to give the track by track extraction speeds and to check the extracted tracks for errors the drive may have created.
CD Write Tests: To test the write speeds, Nero Burning Rom is used to write 650MB and 700MB to our test media. Times are recorded. To test rewrite scores, Nero is used again to time how long it takes to write 400MB of random files and directories. Then Sonic's DLA is used to test packet writing speeds. The same files are copied and pasted in Windows Explorer and timed.
DVD Read Tests: For the read performance section of the DVD benchmarks CD Speed v4.01 is used to test read speeds, seek times, and CPU usage.
DVD Write Tests: To test the DVD write speeds, Nero Burning Rom is used to write 4GB to our test media. Times are recorded. Then Sonic's DLA is used to test packet writing speeds. The same files are copied and pasted in Windows Explorer and timed.
CD Winbench 99 Scores:
Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
|
CD Winbench 99 | 1448 KB/sec | 1798 KB/sec | 2125 KB/sec | 2065 KB/sec |
Transfer Rate: Inside | 2853 KB/sec | 3215 KB/sec | 2773 KB/sec | 3140 KB/sec |
Transfer Rate: Outside | 6530 KB/sec | 6373 KB/sec | 6520 KB/sec | 6360 KB/sec |
Random Access Time | 117ms | 116ms | 114ms | 96ms |
CPU Utilization | 0.25% | 0.24% | 0.25% | 0.31% |
The CD Winbench test is as close as we can get to testing every day usage. It fires off eight different applications using scripts. This tries to mimic the activities of a person loading these programs onto their own computer.
Sony's new DVD writerdid pretty well in the CD Winbench portion of our tests. While the DRU-810A's overall score wasn't as high as some of the other drives, it had some very good transfer rates. The drive started reading at 19x (2853 / 150) and reached a maximum speed of about 43.5x (6530 / 150) on the outside.
CD Speed v4.01 - Pressed CD:
For this test I used a pressed CD containing one Mode 1 data track. The disc is 74:38 in size and is full of data and directories.
Turbo Boost On
Turbo Boost Off
Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
|
Transfer Speed Average: Start: End: |
36.39x 20.64x 48.13x |
35.60x 20.56x 47.07x |
36.37x 20.74x 48.10x |
35.46x 20.50x 46.90x |
Seek Times Random: 1/3: Full: |
106ms 123ms 176ms |
125ms 137ms 213ms |
125ms 141ms 216ms |
102ms 120ms 172ms |
CPU Usage 1x: 2x: 4x: 8x: |
1% 1% 3% 6% |
0% 1% 3% 6% |
1% 2% 4% 7% |
0% 1% 2% 3% |
Sony's new DVD writer performed better in our CD Speed tests. With its Turbo Boost enabled, the DRU-810A flew past the drives from the competition, reaching a maximum transfer speed of 48.13x. Looking at the other scores, you can see that the DRU-810A's seek times were also quite good.
CD Speed v4.01 - CD-R Media:
For this test I made a copy of our pressed test CD. I used 12x rated Memorex Gold 74 minute media for the tests.
Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
|
Transfer Speed Average: Start: End: |
37.23x 20.92x 49.46x |
36.29x 20.73x 48.06x |
37.16x 21.32x 49.26x |
36.24x 20.73x 48.03x |
Seek Times Random: 1/3: Full: |
109ms 123ms 181ms |
142ms 157ms 237ms |
130ms 161ms 238ms |
105ms 130ms 191ms |
CPU Usage 1x: 2x: 4x: 8x: |
1% 1% 3% 6% |
0% 1% 3% 6% |
1% 2% 4% 7% |
0% 1% 2% 4% |
Like the other drives, the DRU-810A was a little faster when reading CD-R media. Thanks to this small speed boost, the drive was able to reach a maximum transfer speed of more than 49x. On top of that, its seek times were again quite good.
Sony's new DVD writer had no problems recognizing our 99 minute CompUSA media. The drive read our test disc from start to finish, reaching a maximum transfer speed of 52.85x! This is pretty good for a drive rated at only 48x.
CD Speed v4.01 - CD-RW Media:
For this test I made a copy of a pressed test CD. I used some PNY 80 minute CD-RW media for the tests.
Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
|
Transfer Speed Average: Start: End: |
30.74x 17.58x 40.58x |
30.79x 17.92x 40.12x |
23.78x 13.87x 31.41x |
31.53x 18.32x 41.64x |
Seek Times Random: 1/3: Full: |
107ms 120ms 172ms |
128ms 138ms 217ms |
134ms 165ms 243ms |
101ms 118ms 174ms |
CPU Usage 1x: 2x: 4x: 8x: |
1% 1% 3% 6% |
0% 1% 3% 5% |
1% 3% 4% 8% |
0% 1% 2% 4% |
While the DRU-810A can read pressed and CD-R media at 48x, its CD-RW read speeds are limited to only 40x. As you can see, the drive had no problems reaching this speed in our tests.
CD DAE and CD Speed v4.01 - Pressed CD:
For this test I used Pure Funk. The CD is almost exactly 74 minutes. This helps to squeeze the maximum performance out of the CD.
Exact Audio Copy can tell us a lot about a drive's capabilities. You can see from the screen shot that while the Sony DRU-810A supports accurate stream and has the ability to cache audio data, it does not have the ability to retrieve C2 error information.
Turbo Boost On
Turbo Boost Off
CD Speed | Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
Average: Start: End: DAE Quality: Accurate Stream: |
36.76x 20.90x 48.59x 10 Yes |
30.92x 17.99x 40.11x 10 Yes |
36.75x 21.32x 48.58x 10 Yes |
31.45x 18.20x 41.55x 10 Yes |
Like the DRU-800A, the DRU-810A performed very well in our DAE tests. With its Turbo Boost enabled, the drive had no problems reaching a maximum DAE speed of 48.59x.
To get a better look at the quality of the extracted audio we use CD DAE. CD DAE is actually designed to be an audio ripping program. It converts the CD-DA on the CD to .wav files. We use it in our testing because it can also be used as a quick and easy way to test the quality. Where CD Speed tests the DAE as one large session, CD DAE extracts each CD track individually. It actually extracts each track twice and then compares them to check for any errors. Every error a drive creates could be a hiss or pop you would hear later in the audio tracks.
CD DAE | Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
Average: Min: Max: |
34.3x 22.0x 47.1x |
29.3x 18.7x 39.6x |
33.8x 22.1x 47.4x |
29.6x 18.6x 40.2x |
Errors | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
While Sony's new DVD writer started out a little faster when extracting our test CD with CD DAE, its average and maximum speeds were slower than what we saw with CD Speed.
CD DAE and CD Speed v4.01 - CD-R Media:
For this test I used a copy of the Pure Funk CD. It's burned onto the same Memorex Gold 74 minute media I used in the CD Speed tests.
CD Speed | Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
Average: Start: End: DAE Quality: Accurate Stream: |
36.41x 20.91x 47.99x 10 Yes |
30.66x 17.93x 40.12x 10 Yes |
36.39x 21.17x 47.98x 10 Yes |
31.50x 18.32x 41.64x 10 Yes |
The DRU-810A was a little slower when ripping audio CD-R discs. While the drive came very close, it wasn't able to reach 48x this time around. So how did it do in CD Speed's advanced DAE tests? Take a look below.
Sony's new DVD writer completed CD Speed's advanced DAE tests with an average score of 34.70x. The drive had no problems passing all of the on-the-fly tests and did not create any errors. In the advanced tests, the DRU-810A was able to read the CD-Text, subchannel data and even the lead in and lead out sections of the CD.
CD DAE | Sony DRU-810A |
NEC ND-3540A |
Sony DRU-800A |
Plextor PX-716A |
Average: Min: Max: |
34.0x 22.0x 46.5x |
29.1x 18.6x 39.5x |
33.8x 22.1x 46.9x |
29.9x 19.1x 40.8x |
Errors | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
To see how well Sony's DVD writer can read scratched and dirty discs, I used CD Speed's ScanDisc utility to see how many sectors were damaged or unreadable. This is a very rough, but good way to test the drive's error correcting abilities.
CD Speed - ScanDisc
Like the BenQ drive its based on, the DRU-810A cannot retrieve error information. Without this ability, the drive is unable to determine whether a sector is damaged or unreadable. This causes all of the sectors to show up as being "bad" in ScanDisc. Switching to C1/C2 didn't seem to work either. The drive read the disc back at only 0.5x and, while all sectors were reported as being "good", the entire graph was black.
You can also get an idea of how well the drive can read scratched and dirty discs by using CD DAE. CD DAE will extract the audio tracks twice and then compare them. From this information we can see what the drive's average speed was and how many errors it generated.
CD DAE | Avg. Speed | Errors | % of Disc |
Sony DRU-810A |
5.9x | 5452039 | 0.70% |
Sony DRU-800A |
1.5x | 2113435 | 0.27% |
Plextor PX-716A |
23.2x | 57330566 | 7.31% |
Sony's new DVD writer gave some mixed results in this test. While the number of errors was pretty low, the scratches on the disc caused it to slow down considerably.