Disc Quality Tests
Having recorded the maximum amount possible onto the BeAll Best DVD-R media at its rated recording speed of 16x to our review drives with CD Speed, the next stage of our review will concentrate on Disc Quality.
Now normally it is here where we would show you the Disc Quality scans using CDSpeed or KProbe with a Liteon writer such as the 1673S, or the BenQ DW 1620A. But now in a new revised 2 stage Disc Quality structure we can offer what we believe to be the most indepth look at the various effects and that we can build a better picture of potential quality with any given Media/Hardware/Speed combination. It has taken 3 months and over 300 various DVD tests to come up with this new structure so we believe it has been tested fully and holds up well.
"As the whole purpose of reviewing media for our readers is to try and obtain a good idea of the average quality of a given media, we have come up with this new methodoligy for determing these factors. These are our own personal views and by no means as accurate as an Industry CAT scan for measuring the quality of a disc but we believe we have come as close as we possible can do with the equipment available to the average user."
The first part of our Quality tests involved scanning all the pieces of BeAll Best DVD-R
media recorded on each review recording device with our Liteon 1673S with Kprobe to find out how many potential PI error and PI Failures a playback device would have to correct whilst playing or transferring the recorded media. This also enabled us to obtain which of the 5 recorded pieces of media most matched the average result based on the well accepted method of PIE/PIF scanning on the Liteon 1673S to show in this stage of the review.
Results of thes tests are shown below:
But that only allows us to see the amount of potential PIE/PIF errors that may need to be corrected by any given DVD playback device. Now we can further examine the average result using the Plextor PX-716A and the excellent PXScan. With this combination of the Plextor and PXScan we can show you even more detailed information about other potential issues that may have to be corrected by playback and transfer devices such as jitter/beta/TA and peakshift.
The Plextor results may look a little hard to understand at first but if like us you take the time to have a good read of the well explained information on the PXScan Website, it will become clear just how these tests work but briefly here are what the new tests can tell us.
The PIE and PIF results show us how many potential errors a playback device may need to correct.
The beta and jitter tests tell us how well balanced a recording is at any given speed.
The TA and peak shift tests tell us how well the actual recording pit of the media has been produced at 3 measured stages during the recording.
"We thank both Karr for his excellent free KProbe software and Alex Noe for his very informative website and very useful PXScan software on behalf of ourselves and any readers that may benefit from the information provided by his Free software. PXScan enables us to do all our required tests in one run and display all the results in one easy to read graph. Without it we would have to show you several different screenshots instead of one for each drive when doing the advanced tests in the Plextor PX-716A."
Shown below are the results of the PXScan tests.:
Overview of Disc Quality results:
Again, like with so many 16x reviews we have done here at CDR-Zone.COM, the NEC based drives recorded the BeAll Best 16x DVD-R media as well as any of the review recording devices used in this review with very good recording times and excellent recorded pits shown as did the recording on the Pioneer DVR 109 XL. Both the BenQ DW 1620A and Plextor PX-716 achieved good results although we do see some room for improvement in the support of the BeAll Best 16x DVD-R media and these drives. The Liteon-IT 1673S although only achieving a 12x recording speed showed very good results in general.
Although not shown in this review tests where carried out on the Plextor PX-716A with the Power Rec feature disabled and the BenQ DW 1620 with the WOPC feature disabled. This normally allows for quicker recording times as the features which control media quality have been switched off. It also sometimes allows for slightly better quality on some media but during our tests it was found that the BeAll Best 16x DVD-R media did not react too well to having these features disabled and we recomend leaving the respective features for these drives enabled with this media.
"Please note that you will need a compatible drive for doing these scans such as the
Plextor PX-716A and Liteon-IT 1693S we have used in this review for making our decisions on the potential quality of this media. Other drives you could try include BenQ, NU TECH and ASUS branded writers, but only the Plextor PX-716 offers the full range of tests."
The less PI/PIF errors that are found on a media then in theory the better the chances
are of good long term playback for this media without data loss becoming a problem. Different scanning devices scan slightly differently but basic guidelines using either a Plextor or Liteon drive are that PI errors should not exceed 280 for sustained periods and PI failures should not exceed 4 for sustained periods. Jitter and beta must remain within set specifications for a Plextor scan ( these will highlighted red in the Disc Quality results if they exceed limits and we would like to see a well written and uniform recording 'pit' during the TA tests for an optimun result at any given speed.
We will expect that not every piece of media is capable of producing this
with such influences as excepted media/ hardware tolerance levels having an impact but we will expect the results not to consistently stray too far from set standards for a recommended media.
If using a Liteon Writer to scan for Pi error and PI failure levels single spikes are usually ignorable due to a bug in the Liteons Mediatek chipset but we will confirm the readability if the recordings with our transfer tests."
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