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#1
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CDRW for audiophile quality burning ?
Hey,
My Yamaha 8424 CDRW went up in smoke the other day, along with my P4CPU (ouch) so now I'm looking for a CDRW to replace it. Unfortunately Yamaha is out of the CDRW business, so I'm starting from scratch. The Yamaha drive was superior in quality as compared to the Philips and Teac drives I have, as well as other generic brands I'd tried & AB tested. It seems that even when burning at slowest speeds (x1), the optical accuracy and/or some other aspect of CDRW are critical for producing audiophile quality. Specifically, the Yamaha was the only drive I'd used (including DVDRWs) that could translate really great stereo imaging and could render stereo reverberant fields as good as on the original wave files or CD. The kind of transparency and ability to render stereo image is not something I've ever been able to correlate with manuf. specs (at least those provided) so test listening is usually in order. My old Sony PCM was capable of that kind of performance in conjunction with a really good video format and my old Sony CD player that I paid about $350 for back in the early 80's was too. I've heard that Marantz CD players have that kind of quality and there are no doubt lots of folks who make less common audiphile gear that would qualify. But a CDRW? I even had a Teac stand alone CD burner about 6 years ago and it simply couldn't match the audio quality of the Yamaha 8424 for burning CDs and frankly I'd rather stay away from stand alone burners for a host of other reasons. Anyone out there with a critical ear who's noticed knows of a suitable CDRW for audiophile quality burning? I'd appreciate your input. :-) Skler Austin-T |
#2
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skler wrote:
My Yamaha 8424 CDRW went up in smoke the other day, along with my P4CPU (ouch) so now I'm looking for a CDRW to replace it. Unfortunately Yamaha is out of the CDRW business, so I'm starting from scratch. Why CDRW? What is wrong with standard CDR? The Yamaha drive was superior in quality as compared to the Philips and Teac drives I have, as well as other generic brands I'd tried & AB tested. It seems that even when burning at slowest speeds (x1), the optical accuracy and/or some other aspect of CDRW are critical for producing audiophile quality. Specifically, the Yamaha was the only drive I'd used (including DVDRWs) that could translate really great stereo imaging and could render stereo reverberant fields as good as on the original wave files or CD. If you are noticing this sort of difference between burners, I would start looking at your playback system. The better your playback system is able to deal with errors and phase shift on the clock, the less you will have to worry about the quality of the original disc. The kind of transparency and ability to render stereo image is not something I've ever been able to correlate with manuf. specs (at least those provided) so test listening is usually in order. My old Sony PCM was capable of that kind of performance in conjunction with a really good video format and my old Sony CD player that I paid about $350 for back in the early 80's was too. I've heard that Marantz CD players have that kind of quality and there are no doubt lots of folks who make less common audiphile gear that would qualify. But a CDRW? I even had a Teac stand alone CD burner about 6 years ago and it simply couldn't match the audio quality of the Yamaha 8424 for burning CDs and frankly I'd rather stay away from stand alone burners for a host of other reasons. I suggest that you look at the Plextor drives, if only because they allow you to actually measure the error rates. This gives you the ability to select a burn rate and blank brand which will give you the lowest possible errors, and this will translate more into better sound quality than anything else. Anyone out there with a critical ear who's noticed knows of a suitable CDRW for audiophile quality burning? I'd appreciate your input. :-) Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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skler wrote:
My Yamaha 8424 CDRW went up in smoke the other day, along with my P4CPU (ouch) so now I'm looking for a CDRW to replace it. Unfortunately Yamaha is out of the CDRW business, so I'm starting from scratch. Why CDRW? What is wrong with standard CDR? The Yamaha drive was superior in quality as compared to the Philips and Teac drives I have, as well as other generic brands I'd tried & AB tested. It seems that even when burning at slowest speeds (x1), the optical accuracy and/or some other aspect of CDRW are critical for producing audiophile quality. Specifically, the Yamaha was the only drive I'd used (including DVDRWs) that could translate really great stereo imaging and could render stereo reverberant fields as good as on the original wave files or CD. If you are noticing this sort of difference between burners, I would start looking at your playback system. The better your playback system is able to deal with errors and phase shift on the clock, the less you will have to worry about the quality of the original disc. The kind of transparency and ability to render stereo image is not something I've ever been able to correlate with manuf. specs (at least those provided) so test listening is usually in order. My old Sony PCM was capable of that kind of performance in conjunction with a really good video format and my old Sony CD player that I paid about $350 for back in the early 80's was too. I've heard that Marantz CD players have that kind of quality and there are no doubt lots of folks who make less common audiphile gear that would qualify. But a CDRW? I even had a Teac stand alone CD burner about 6 years ago and it simply couldn't match the audio quality of the Yamaha 8424 for burning CDs and frankly I'd rather stay away from stand alone burners for a host of other reasons. I suggest that you look at the Plextor drives, if only because they allow you to actually measure the error rates. This gives you the ability to select a burn rate and blank brand which will give you the lowest possible errors, and this will translate more into better sound quality than anything else. Anyone out there with a critical ear who's noticed knows of a suitable CDRW for audiophile quality burning? I'd appreciate your input. :-) Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? --scott Now THAT is the question CDRWs should be used for computer data, not for serious audio. Besides, at 30-50 cents a pop, CDRs are way cheaper than blank cassettes. CD |
#5
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? --scott Now THAT is the question CDRWs should be used for computer data, not for serious audio. Besides, at 30-50 cents a pop, CDRs are way cheaper than blank cassettes. CD |
#6
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message
skler wrote: My Yamaha 8424 CDRW went up in smoke the other day, along with my P4CPU (ouch) so now I'm looking for a CDRW to replace it. Unfortunately Yamaha is out of the CDRW business, so I'm starting from scratch. Why CDRW? What is wrong with standard CDR? They dropped those, too. http://www.yamaha.co.jp/english/product/computer/ If you want a computer drive that burns CDs and has the Yamaha logo on it, you either get some NOS, or move on to a DVD burner. |
#7
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message
skler wrote: My Yamaha 8424 CDRW went up in smoke the other day, along with my P4CPU (ouch) so now I'm looking for a CDRW to replace it. Unfortunately Yamaha is out of the CDRW business, so I'm starting from scratch. Why CDRW? What is wrong with standard CDR? They dropped those, too. http://www.yamaha.co.jp/english/product/computer/ If you want a computer drive that burns CDs and has the Yamaha logo on it, you either get some NOS, or move on to a DVD burner. |
#8
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G. Louie wrote:
In article , Scott Dorsey wrote: (snip) Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? In one case, I've found the opposite to be true. I tried TDK CDRWs at 1X in a new HHB CDR830, and a used Sony CDRW33, error checking them on a Clover Systems CDX error rate analyzer. Both tests showed the lowest, cleanest error rates that I have ever seen from any CDR burn, at any speed, cyanine or pthalocyanine. Both recorders made pretty poor CDRs (1X, various name brand cyanine or Mitsui gold pthalocyanine) from an error rate standpoint, but most all CD players tended to play the CDRs anyway without obvious choking. This was surprising enough that I really have to make some more tests to verify this. So your experince says that CDRWs make the most error free copies but CDRs still tend to be the most readable or playable? Odd. What a technically confusing world we live in. CD |
#9
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G. Louie wrote:
In article , Scott Dorsey wrote: (snip) Since the CDRW is going to have a higher error rate than a stock CD-R, why are you using it over CD-R if you care about sound quality? In one case, I've found the opposite to be true. I tried TDK CDRWs at 1X in a new HHB CDR830, and a used Sony CDRW33, error checking them on a Clover Systems CDX error rate analyzer. Both tests showed the lowest, cleanest error rates that I have ever seen from any CDR burn, at any speed, cyanine or pthalocyanine. Both recorders made pretty poor CDRs (1X, various name brand cyanine or Mitsui gold pthalocyanine) from an error rate standpoint, but most all CD players tended to play the CDRs anyway without obvious choking. This was surprising enough that I really have to make some more tests to verify this. So your experince says that CDRWs make the most error free copies but CDRs still tend to be the most readable or playable? Odd. What a technically confusing world we live in. CD |
#11
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#12
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"G. Louie" wrote:
I would not be surprised at all to find that low error rates translate into subjectively better sounding audio, but I'm not going there yet. Provided your recorder is giving no uncorrectable errors, the sound of the disc is totally dependent on your player. In fact, if your player sounds different with data identical discs then your player isn't particularly good. Nowadays a $20 CD drive can extract perfect audio so it seems strange to me that, so called audiophile, players sound different with different discs. Buy a Benchmark DAC-1 digital to analogue convertor and then see if the discs sound different. Cheers. James. |
#13
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"G. Louie" wrote:
I would not be surprised at all to find that low error rates translate into subjectively better sounding audio, but I'm not going there yet. Provided your recorder is giving no uncorrectable errors, the sound of the disc is totally dependent on your player. In fact, if your player sounds different with data identical discs then your player isn't particularly good. Nowadays a $20 CD drive can extract perfect audio so it seems strange to me that, so called audiophile, players sound different with different discs. Buy a Benchmark DAC-1 digital to analogue convertor and then see if the discs sound different. Cheers. James. |
#14
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G. Louie wrote:
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This leads me to suspect much audio extraction, too, but I do not have any info on different audio CD extraction/ripping hardware/software techniques in use. I do know that my newest computer gear extracts audio without audible glitches that would show up on my older gear, but I can't say if the extractions are always perfect bit for bit copies every time. This is the whole point of the CD format.. it has a very high error rate, but it has all sorts of error correction and concealment to deal with that error rate. You will find the interpolation kicks in a lot when listening to typical pressings. I don't know about extraction. If you can do multiple reads over and over, transient errors can be corrected. You can't do that with a CD player but you could easily do that when ripping since the ripping does not need to be done in realtime. I do think that different CD players produce vastly different sounds when playing discs with uncorrectable errors. This is true. And there are always uncorrectable errors. -scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#15
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G. Louie wrote:
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This leads me to suspect much audio extraction, too, but I do not have any info on different audio CD extraction/ripping hardware/software techniques in use. I do know that my newest computer gear extracts audio without audible glitches that would show up on my older gear, but I can't say if the extractions are always perfect bit for bit copies every time. This is the whole point of the CD format.. it has a very high error rate, but it has all sorts of error correction and concealment to deal with that error rate. You will find the interpolation kicks in a lot when listening to typical pressings. I don't know about extraction. If you can do multiple reads over and over, transient errors can be corrected. You can't do that with a CD player but you could easily do that when ripping since the ripping does not need to be done in realtime. I do think that different CD players produce vastly different sounds when playing discs with uncorrectable errors. This is true. And there are always uncorrectable errors. -scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#16
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"G. Louie" wrote:
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This indicates major problems somewhere. I can't remember the last time I saw an E32 on a freshly burned CD-R - in fact I don't think I've ever seen one. I've had very occasional C2 (E12 or E22) but even these are restricted to cheap blanks that have been sitting on the shelf too long. If you use Exact Audio Copy to extract your audio then you can be fairly sure that the extraction is accurate. Many other popular extraction programs aren't accurate. Cheers. James. |
#17
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"G. Louie" wrote:
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This indicates major problems somewhere. I can't remember the last time I saw an E32 on a freshly burned CD-R - in fact I don't think I've ever seen one. I've had very occasional C2 (E12 or E22) but even these are restricted to cheap blanks that have been sitting on the shelf too long. If you use Exact Audio Copy to extract your audio then you can be fairly sure that the extraction is accurate. Many other popular extraction programs aren't accurate. Cheers. James. |
#19
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In article ,
(Scott Dorsey) wrote: G. Louie wrote: My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This leads me to suspect much audio extraction, too, but I do not have any info on different audio CD extraction/ripping hardware/software techniques in use. I do know that my newest computer gear extracts audio without audible glitches that would show up on my older gear, but I can't say if the extractions are always perfect bit for bit copies every time. This is the whole point of the CD format.. it has a very high error rate, but it has all sorts of error correction and concealment to deal with that error rate. You will find the interpolation kicks in a lot when listening to typical pressings. I don't know about extraction. If you can do multiple reads over and over, transient errors can be corrected. You can't do that with a CD player but you could easily do that when ripping since the ripping does not need to be done in realtime. I do think that different CD players produce vastly different sounds when playing discs with uncorrectable errors. This is true. And there are always uncorrectable errors. -scott I have read somewhere (but do not know if it is bull****) that most every normal computer CD burner put their data on the CD in "bursts" as opposed to real gear that will put the data in a continuous flow. The result is arguably audible Does this make sense ? A CD-RW in a good (read professional) machine might then have less errors than a consumer styled burner doing a CD-R ? -- Joakim Wendel Remove obvious mail JUNK block for mail reply. My homepage : http://violinist.nu |
#20
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"G. Louie" wrote in message
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This leads me to suspect much audio extraction, too, but I do not have any info on different audio CD extraction/ripping hardware/software techniques in use. The logical way to check out the quality of final results, is to burn an audio CD, then rip it, and see if you get back the same bits you put on the disc. Good software for this check includes the EAC and CDEX extractors, Both are freeware, and either can be searched for instantly using google. Not only does this software do high-quality extraction, but it includes bit comparison software that automatically synchronizes and resynchronizes the data being compared. This is helpful because sometimes the burning/extraction software adds a few binary zeroes to the front or back end of a track. If there are any differences, it would be nice to know if the data can be resynchronized after the error, so that additional errors can be found if they exist. Typically, when I burn a CD with EZCD or Nero, and then test the CD using CDEX or EAC, I get perfect comparisons. |
#21
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"G. Louie" wrote in message
My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This leads me to suspect much audio extraction, too, but I do not have any info on different audio CD extraction/ripping hardware/software techniques in use. The logical way to check out the quality of final results, is to burn an audio CD, then rip it, and see if you get back the same bits you put on the disc. Good software for this check includes the EAC and CDEX extractors, Both are freeware, and either can be searched for instantly using google. Not only does this software do high-quality extraction, but it includes bit comparison software that automatically synchronizes and resynchronizes the data being compared. This is helpful because sometimes the burning/extraction software adds a few binary zeroes to the front or back end of a track. If there are any differences, it would be nice to know if the data can be resynchronized after the error, so that additional errors can be found if they exist. Typically, when I burn a CD with EZCD or Nero, and then test the CD using CDEX or EAC, I get perfect comparisons. |
#22
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In article ,
James Perrett wrote: "G. Louie" wrote: My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This indicates major problems somewhere. I can't remember the last time I saw an E32 on a freshly burned CD-R - in fact I don't think I've ever seen one. I've had very occasional C2 (E12 or E22) but even these are restricted to cheap blanks that have been sitting on the shelf too long. If you use Exact Audio Copy to extract your audio then you can be fairly sure that the extraction is accurate. Many other popular extraction programs aren't accurate. ------ All very interesting. I can get E32 errors all the time, on our realtime audio CDR decks (HHB and Sony), our computer burners from Panasonic, Plextor, Yamaha, Lite-On, Pioneer; at all speeds from 1X to 52X, on Macs (Toast) and PCs (CD Architect). Various cyanine CDRs (Maxell, Imation TDK) and Mitsui Gold. The number of errors varies a lot. We use a Clover CDX analyzer, and it's hard to know if it's calibrated well or not. It comes with a calibration CD with little dots on it, but many parameters are unclear. What burner, speed, and error rate analyzer are you using? I am mostly Mac based, so for EAC I'd have to move to the Windows machine for extractions - which I would if I felt it was defintely more accurate and reliable. |
#23
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In article ,
James Perrett wrote: "G. Louie" wrote: My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This indicates major problems somewhere. I can't remember the last time I saw an E32 on a freshly burned CD-R - in fact I don't think I've ever seen one. I've had very occasional C2 (E12 or E22) but even these are restricted to cheap blanks that have been sitting on the shelf too long. If you use Exact Audio Copy to extract your audio then you can be fairly sure that the extraction is accurate. Many other popular extraction programs aren't accurate. ------ All very interesting. I can get E32 errors all the time, on our realtime audio CDR decks (HHB and Sony), our computer burners from Panasonic, Plextor, Yamaha, Lite-On, Pioneer; at all speeds from 1X to 52X, on Macs (Toast) and PCs (CD Architect). Various cyanine CDRs (Maxell, Imation TDK) and Mitsui Gold. The number of errors varies a lot. We use a Clover CDX analyzer, and it's hard to know if it's calibrated well or not. It comes with a calibration CD with little dots on it, but many parameters are unclear. What burner, speed, and error rate analyzer are you using? I am mostly Mac based, so for EAC I'd have to move to the Windows machine for extractions - which I would if I felt it was defintely more accurate and reliable. |
#24
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On or about Mon, 04 Oct 2004 20:22:00 +0200, Joakim Wendel allegedly
wrote: I have read somewhere (but do not know if it is bull****) that most every normal computer CD burner put their data on the CD in "bursts" as opposed to real gear that will put the data in a continuous flow. The result is arguably audible Does this make sense ? The computer transfers data to the drive in bursts. The drive has a buffer memory where it stores and prepares this before burning it to the disc. Assuming you're burning disc at once, this is done in a continual data stream fashion. If you burn track-at-once, then each tracks data is sent as a sort of burst. perhaps that's what your source is confusing. Noel Bachelor noelbachelorAT(From:_domain) Language Recordings Inc (Darwin Australia) |
#25
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On or about Mon, 04 Oct 2004 20:22:00 +0200, Joakim Wendel allegedly
wrote: I have read somewhere (but do not know if it is bull****) that most every normal computer CD burner put their data on the CD in "bursts" as opposed to real gear that will put the data in a continuous flow. The result is arguably audible Does this make sense ? The computer transfers data to the drive in bursts. The drive has a buffer memory where it stores and prepares this before burning it to the disc. Assuming you're burning disc at once, this is done in a continual data stream fashion. If you burn track-at-once, then each tracks data is sent as a sort of burst. perhaps that's what your source is confusing. Noel Bachelor noelbachelorAT(From:_domain) Language Recordings Inc (Darwin Australia) |
#26
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"G. Louie" wrote:
In article , James Perrett wrote: "G. Louie" wrote: My limited testing seems to show that most CDRs typically have quite a few uncorrectable (E32) errors. This indicates major problems somewhere. I can't remember the last time I saw an E32 on a freshly burned CD-R - in fact I don't think I've ever seen one. I've had very occasional C2 (E12 or E22) but even these are restricted to cheap blanks that have been sitting on the shelf too long. If you use Exact Audio Copy to extract your audio then you can be fairly sure that the extraction is accurate. Many other popular extraction programs aren't accurate. ------ All very interesting. I can get E32 errors all the time, on our realtime audio CDR decks (HHB and Sony), our computer burners from Panasonic, Plextor, Yamaha, Lite-On, Pioneer; at all speeds from 1X to 52X, on Macs (Toast) and PCs (CD Architect). Various cyanine CDRs (Maxell, Imation TDK) and Mitsui Gold. The number of errors varies a lot. We use a Clover CDX analyzer, and it's hard to know if it's calibrated well or not. It comes with a calibration CD with little dots on it, but many parameters are unclear. What burner, speed, and error rate analyzer are you using? I am mostly Mac based, so for EAC I'd have to move to the Windows machine for extractions - which I would if I felt it was defintely more accurate and reliable. If the discs I burned were giving any E32 errors then they would be rejected by the pressing plants that I send them to - I've not had any E32 errors reported on any of the discs I've sent out for replication. I use a Plextor Premium with Plextools to check error rates at the moment but there are a variety of low cost tools that will report errors as severe as an E32 (also known as a CU or uncorrectable error). Plextools will give you C1 (E11 and E21) and C2 (E12 and E22) errors as well. A well burned disc will give a C1 error rate of less than 1 and no C2 errors, let alone CU(E32) errors. You say you have a Plextor drive. Try using Plextools' error checking features - the basic CD Test option will work with most of their drives if you don't have a Plextor Premium and will tell you about any C2 or worse errors that you have. If you don't have access to Plextools then Nero's CDSpeed program will give the same information and works with a wider variety of drives. CDSpeed is also available separately from the Ahead web site. Cheers. James. |
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