Professional CD-R and DVD-R Burners/Duplicators? 41
burnWell asks: "I work for a software publisher, and when preparing CD media for final distribution to the manufacturer (the Gold Master if you will), we often find that our CD and DVD burns are not very good quality. Are there any recommendations for professional grade, highest quality CD-R and DVD-R writers? Are there any tools or metrics we should use to verify how 'good' a particular burn happens to be, and to that end, how well behaved some brands of media are versus another? Are there recommendations for the very highest quality CD-R and DVD-R duplicators?"
Plextor (Score:2, Informative)
Two words: Taiyo Yuden (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Plextor (Score:5, Informative)
I do wish Yamaha still manufactured CDR drives. Theirs were just as good as Plextor's.
Some quick tips:
Always burn at a slow speed. For a master I can't recommend going higher than 4x. 2x is probably best.
Dedicate as much RAM as possible to buffer the data stream between the source and the CD you are burning.
Try to stick with internal drives. While the ATA-to-USB/firewire bridges work quite well, it's just one more thing to possibly cause problems.
One drive per channel (SCSI excepted). Don't place another drive on the same IDE channel as the CDR drive. If you must use external drives, give each a dedicated USB/firewire connection to the computer.
As for media, I've heard rumors that the discs produced in Japan are of better quality than those made elsewhere, but have never seen anything to back this up. I'd always had great results with Kodak media in the past, but it seems they don't make discs anymore. You may want to check and verify.
Trial and Error (Score:3, Informative)
The first is that the specific brand that works best will vary from one CD burner to another. The only thing that you can do is buy a lot of samples and try burns at different speeds and with different brands until you know what gives you the best results.
As noted, slower burns usually are better, but the optimal speed will vary too.
The other problem is that manufacturers change their formulations from time to time. You of course have no way to know this, but may find that the media that worked great last month suddenly has problems.
Another test can be found here [beradio.com].
Re:Plextor (Score:2, Informative)
It has burnt hundreds of CDs, with only 6 coasters created (usually when copying CDs that have anti-copy features/flaws that Easy CD Creator 3.5c cant handle).
It cost $640 AUS including the Adaptec AIC-7850 PCI to SCSI card.
I realise Plextor is a more recognised brand name, but would anyone buy a used CDR... regardless of the brand? I probably wouldn't. But something good has to be said about old hardware that keeps on working.
Re:Delivering a disc?!? (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, Yggdrasil Linux was responsible for writing the first open source tool for producing DVD masters on tape, which they used for releasing a DVD-based Linux distro back in... 1998? Info about it here [chguy.net].
That said, for CD mastering use CD-Rs that are designed to be used as masters (they are REAL gold media, and are not cheap, ~US$10ea), burn at 1x, make sure your disc is *really* standard compliant...
Also, for mastering DVDs you need to be certain to have a drive which will write the CSS bits. Standard drives won't, and mastering drives cost ~$1k, last I checked, because of all the licensing required for implementing CSS.
Mastering (Score:5, Informative)
For our CD's, we used Mitsui primarily. They were a decent balance between cost and reliability. We'd also always submit to our release labs at least five copies of each CD.
Finally, we'd use a tool (CRC 3.05, available to MSDN subscribers in Subscriber Downloads) which would calculate the CRC value of each CD. Once we finished burning a CD, we'd do a binary compare with the source bits, and if everything matched up, we'd add the CD to our "good" pile.
For the first several (spread out over three years), we used a PlexWriter 2x writing at 1x to burn. We also used Goldenhawk CDR-WIN to burn the masters, but had to switch to Prassi once Goldenhawk stopped putting in the proper postgap on the CD's.
For our final disks, we went with a PlexWriter 48x writing at 16x.
it pays to shop around.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ISO? (Score:2, Informative)
I'll take that one step further: deliver the ISO on a DVD-RAM. Don't bother with +/- R or RW. A DVD-RAM is a much more stable medium.
While I'm here, I'd recommend the LG DVD burners. I've got one, and I know a number of others who do, and they seem to be very good. The old Plextor drives were good too; haven't tried any current ones though.
-- Steve
This site is good (Score:4, Informative)
Has some very detailed reviews, including detailed quality analysis tests with many combinations of drives and media.
Re:Plextor (Score:2, Informative)
Mitsui is my fave, their gold CDs are the best CD-R discs I've encountered.
Re:Two words: Taiyo Yuden (Score:3, Informative)
You are exercising a common misconception here. Taiyo Yuden is a company the manufacturers CD-Rs. Taiyo Yuden CD-Rs are made by Taiyo Yuden.
This is not true with Verbatim. While Verbatim is owned by Mitsubishi Chemicals Company and some Verbatim media is made by MCC, much of it is also made by CMC Magnetics (boo! hiss!). Chances are, you're comparing a POS disc from CMC to a premium disc from Taiyo Yuden. If you did acquire a true MCC disc, it would be very good, almost as good as the T-Y. (The real MMC ones are Made in Singapore. The CMC and many other types too are Made in Taiwan.)
So it is not fair to compare Verbatim to Taiyo Yuden as there is no way to know who *really* made the Verbatim disc unless you give us the media code.
Re:Plextor (Score:4, Informative)
A common misconception - Plextor used to be the absolute best. Honestly they have been falling from the throne since they released the PX-708A (which is the predecessor to the PX-712A (which is the predecessor to the PX-716A.))
The 708A had pretty good quality burns, but they still did not qualify as excellent. But lots of people reported problems with this drive and CD media in general. It had a tendency to somehow get 'stuck' on DVD-only mode and not read any CD media, pressed or burned. My own 708A only read CD (pressed and burned) at 4X and actually left scuffs on them. I spoke to many people on forums about this and it was widely reported, some people going through two and three RMAs. I returned it to costco and got another one which fortunately worked well. I paid CDN$300 for my 708A right when it came out and I still feel ripped of my money.
The PX-712A, while an excellent drive in theory that got very good reviews, still only had 'pretty good' burning quality, which IMO is not good enough for the most expensive drive in its class at the time. There were also a lot of burn quality problems, again with people going through two and three RMAs.
As to the PX-716A, it is simply not good enough to be worth its exorbitant price. Again the burn quality for CDR and DVDR is very good but not supreme. This is confirmed by PI/PO and C1/C2 scans in comparison to other drives of half the cost.
Every burner I have owned for the last 5 years was a Plextor, but I think it will stop here. The competition delivers better burn quality for much less money. Plextor's products are not rock solid anymore and I won't pay their price.
If you want the best CD-R burning on a drive today, get yourself an old Plextor Premium (back fomr the days when Plextor *was* the King of Quality) or get a very economical NEC-ND3500A which currenty owns the title for the lowest error rates on CDR and DVDR burns.
CD quality.. (Score:3, Informative)
We've always used Taiyo Uden's. Big surprise.
Making a hash/md5sum is pretty silly and is one layer above what you need to be checking.
What you need to check are the block errors/specifically c1/c2 errors.
When a cd is authored, it is authored to cd with subcode that can not be changed in the slightest.
Q-bit subcode is the term for the information on a compact disc that holds the track number, track length, and time in track.
Any change results in bad crossfades, blips and other ugliness.. Some plants have been known to extract the audio and redo it, and generate crap.
Most masterhouses know which ones these are and stay away from them.
Whats important are c1/c2 errors.
Check http://www.cdrinfo.com/Sections/Reviews/Specific.
for a technical description.
C1 is error correction for the block error rate (BLER), which consists of bit errors at the lowest level. BLER is normally given in errors per second. The typical maximum BLER for quality recording is 220 errors per second.
C2 error correction applies to bytes in a frame (24 bytes per frame, 98 frames per block) and is an indication of the drive's attempt to use extended error correction to recover the data. Even a few C2 errors can be an indication of poor media quality or a drive's inability to write or read correctly.
CU error correction applies to uncorrectable errors, or errors that are present after C2 level correction. No CU errors are allowed in a recorded disc. CU errors are usually a result of damage to a disc and represent unrecoverable data. Discs with CU errors quite often cannot be read.
The acceptable number of c2 errors is zero for a disc sent to the plant.
A simple check with kprobe or plextools pro will validate your disc, your burn, your burner, and whether or not you really should be smoking in the computer room..
Once it hits the plant, the disc is reread, all samples, subcode intact and a glass master is made to create the pits in the substrate..
Some manufactured discs, have more c1's than a typical burn, this could lead to early death due to scratches.. HMMM..