| | #27 (permalink) |
| Senior Moderator & Reviewer Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Keeping my media stash safe.
Posts: 24,649
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article I think this is a terrific article, and a lot of hard work has obviously gone into it ![]() Well laid out, and easy to understand for even me! Kudos, Dee ![]()
__________________ Current drives: Samsung SH-S203N (SB02 patched) + Pioneer DVR-115D (1.06) + Optiarc AD-5170S (1.12) + Litey LH-20A1H (LL0D) + Samsung SH-S182D (SB06 RPC1) x2 + Litey SHM-165P6S (MS0R) + LG E10N (JE07) + BenQ DW1650 (BCDC) x2 + Litey SHW-1635S (YV6P) x2 + BenQ DW1640@164B (BEFB) + LG 4167B (DL13 TDB) + Samsung SH-S162L (TS08) + NEC ND-4551A (1.Z2) + LG GCE-8520B (1.00) + LiteOn SOHR-5239S (2S0B) Retired: LiteOn LDW-851@SOHW-832 + LiteOn SOHW-1693S + LG 4163B My Review PCs How to delete your upper and lower filters : How to check/enable DMA by Womble Click here to join cdfreaks.com and be part of our friendly community! ![]() The CDFreaks Distributed Computing Teams need YOU! Join the Team(s) and help save some lives! Read more here |
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| | #28 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: May 2005 Location: USS-Enterprise 1701-A--the finest starship ever
Posts: 2,901
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article It is a good article! Testing all those burners and showing all those scans took a lot of time, and that article is the first time all those explanations about ECMA, 'rough' interpreting of PIE/PIF results and is certainly the first time all these popular brands/burners have been combined in one place, as before someone would have had to go to the respective reviews to read the results (~ 10 pages each), but now they are all together, with the unusual 'twist' of 'scanning' for each other. Some of the issues of some burners not liking other burners burns are sometimes evident in these comparison, whereas before one had to read posts in the forum, scattered over many pages and sometimes threads to get this idea. Nice compilation, Dee! Had I realized how long it would take me just to compare 4 of 8 pages, I would have done all the work on MS Word, then cut/paste here. I will however, finish it up and post the rest when done. I was kind of baffled by the CMC MAG AE1 results, as I had seen AE1 burns much better than that, so either the burns I saw were from much earlier versions of AE1 that were better, the AE1 quality is now majorly variable, or something like that. I will say (without any technical explanations of it, since Dragemester did that already) that I never found "Good Accuracy" for scanning on my 716a to be signficantly different from "High Accuracy." You basically saved the time, and I always found PIE total was +/- 100 and PIF total was +/- 10 for each scan when compared, so I never had any problem using "Good Accuracy" once I tabulated my scan results. I also found from my testing that for example 4x CLV for the LiteOn is far better and more consistent then using 8x, as I saw scanning anomalies, especially towards the end of the scan, where 8x would report things 4x never did. I have read 2 other posters that seemed to be meticulous in scanning their burns noticed that even 8x on the BenQ was slighly problematic, and that results were more consistent at 4x on it as well. However, I have not tested 8x vs. 4x on the BenQ, so I cannot comment intelligently on that. It is reasonable to say that CLV scanning should be more consistent, and that is true with 4x CLV with a LiteOn.
__________________ "Sic vis pacem para bellum" "Lo único que vale en la vida es la pasión" "You sure you do not want to stay? You fight good for a tourist!" "Why do I feel like you truly see me, when others do not?" --Well, my horse likes you...!" "MY KIDS could teach YOU a thing or two, Johnny!!" "If the lie is big enough and told often enough, it will be believed."--Joseph Goebbels See what Geno888 is drooling over right now. I found Airhead's cookbook and all he did was edit my signature! Want to be better informed about good media, solving computer problems and DVD burner performance? Join CDFreaks by clicking here. |
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| | #29 (permalink) | ||
| Moderator Join Date: Oct 2004 Location: Denmark
Posts: 13,833
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
The "goodness"/"badness" of a disc isn't an all-or-nothing property, shades of grey exist, and by scanning at different speeds it's possible to get a better idea of where the disc is on the good...bad scale. Discs/burns that are marginal may show significantly worse scans at high speeds, whereas really good discs/burns may show little difference. Quote:
The trick is to change the read speed after the scan has started. I'm not sure how PlexTools Professional XL behaves, because I don't have this program myself. | ||
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| | #31 (permalink) | |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Missouri, USA
Posts: 1,082
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
(I couldn't resist) ![]()
__________________ LITE-ON SHW-160P6S BenQ DW1640 Philips DVDR3575H/37 LITE-ON HD-A760GX BenQ DW1620 (Retired) BenQ DW1650 (Retired) Polaroid DRM-2001G (Retired) | |
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| | #32 (permalink) | |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 937
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
![]() Thanks Dee-27 for taking the time to make the tests here. I never had a Plextor DVDR but this test is pretty similar to my impression of my NEC/Benq/LiteOns ![]()
__________________ Writers - LiteOn SHM-165P6SX (MS0P) (USB) - Pioneer 215D - 3x Pioneer DVR 112 (1.22) - 3x Pioneer 111D (1.29) - Plextor PX-810SA (1.00) Scanner/ripper/reader - LiteOn 1653SX (CS0T) (USB) - LiteOn SHM-165P6SX (MS0P) (USB) - LiteOn SOHC 5235K Shelved LG 5163 (A104) - LiteOn SOHR-5239V (2$0E) - 1x Samsung 203B (SB01) - NEC/Optiarc 7170S (1.82) - Benq 1640 (BSRB) - NEC 3500 & NEC 3520 - Pioneer 106D & 107D - LiteOn 411 & 811 and some.. The King is on vacation after 2 years - LG 4163 (A106) Fatally broken - 1x Samsung 203B (SB01) | |
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| | #34 (permalink) | |
| CD Freaks Junior Member Join Date: Jul 2002 Location: Planet Earth (maybe)
Posts: 58
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
![]()
__________________ Drives : Lite-On Based : Lite-On SOHW-1673S. Lite-On SHM-165P6S. Sony DDU1615. Samsung Based : Samsung SH-S182D. Samsung SH-W162C. Samsung TS-H552U. LG Based : LG GSA-4163B. LG GSA-4167B. LG GDR8164B. BENQ Based : BenQ DW1655. BenQ DW1640. BenQ DW1620 Pro. BenQ 1650V DVD-ROM NEC Based : NEC ND-3500AG. NEC ND-3540A. Pioneer Based : Pioneer A09XL. ASUS DRW-1608P3S Others : Plextor Premium. Asus DRW-1814BLT | |
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| | #36 (permalink) |
| Retired Moderator & Reviewer Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Calgary, Alberta. Canada
Posts: 4,650
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Great article Dee-27. FYI for those asking about Plextor's high accuracy tests. Here is one disc with all tests done at high accuracy. Just the testing/scanning part took 102 minutes and 19 seconds. http://club.cdfreaks.com/showpost.ph...postcount=2125. Needless to say I agree with Dee-27 and DrageMester that the Plextor takes way too long @high accuracy
__________________ My PC Specs. Plextor 760A/716A 1.07/1.10, BenQ DW1655, BCIB, BenQ DW1640 x2, BSLB, Nec 4551A, 1.08. Lite On SHM 165P6S/LH-20A1S, MS0R/9L05. LG GSA H22N/H62N, 1.02/CL01. SH-S203B, SB03. The Forum Rules Click here to join CDFreaks.com. |
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| | #37 (permalink) | |
| CD Freaks Senior Member Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Formosa
Posts: 299
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
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| | #38 (permalink) | |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Israel
Posts: 667
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article thanks Dee for the article. i'm sure a tremenduous amount of work. it's very much appreciated. possibly a noob question, but: Quote:
another point: i think it would've been interesting had the Lite-On been tested using CDSpeed, not KProbe. at least, this would've better enabled a comparison of the BenQ, NEC and Lite-On since one variable (software) wouldn've been eliminated. as to the 8x CAV/?x CLV scanning speed for the BenQ, well i guess it depends what exactly you want to test/compare. but out of curiousity of scoobiedoobie's comment, i just scanned a 4.30GB data disc with my BenQ DW1620, 8x CAV took 9:36, 6x CLV took 8:59 ! faster indeed.
__________________ One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them JRRT Last edited by dodecahedron; 24-09-2006 at 23:00. | |
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| | #39 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: May 2002 Location: Near Seoul, South Korea
Posts: 12,367
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article After all, I'm glad that I never bought a Plextor DVD writer of 12x to 18x speeds. It not just saved me a lot of money, but also a lot of scanning time! For which I have to feel grateful regarding the Plextor distributor in Seoul that still sells a PX-716A for 3x + price of a GSA-H10A. Even a Conroe E6300 CPU costs just 40% more.Thanks, Dee, for another great article. @Wesociety Nice to see you are still alive. @DrageMester Great posts!
__________________ Kill Confucius |
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| | #40 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,503
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Interesting... To pick up on a few other arguments: 1. Neutrality - some scanning drives seem to judge recalibration points extremely harshly, while others are unforgiving of other deviations from optimum. 2. Speed - in some cases, since reading faster is more demanding, the fastest speed can be best for a simple "is this burn any good" determination. Would have been interesting to see how the same set of drives responded to a bad burn on poor quality media - what shows up first, nasty TRT curves or PI/PIF effects - seen a lot of ratty TRT's in CDRINFO's tests, but their scanning is PI/PO not PI/PIF |
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| | #41 (permalink) | ||
| Moderator Join Date: Oct 2004 Location: Denmark
Posts: 13,833
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
8 ECC scanners such as the BenQ drives report the sum of PIF per 8 ECC blocks (Sum8) instead of per 1 ECC block (Sum1) as required by ECMA standards. Calculating the Sum8 value from 8 separate Sum1 values is trivial, the reverse however is impossible, because there are many ways the reported number of PIF could have been distributed among the 8 ECC blocks. Examples:So how does one go about coming up with a reasonable calculated value when it is in fact impossible to calculate it correctly? There are basically four ways of doing it: 1. Worst case calculation All the PIF reported in the 8 ECC block sample could be in the same ECC block (up to a maximum of 208), so we have to use the reported number directly: Worst-case Max PIF (Sum1) = 1 * Reported PIF (Sum8) If the worst-case calculated Max PIF (Sum1) is within the ECMA limit (4 or less), there's 100% confidence that the real PIF (Sum1) seen but not reported by the drive is also within the ECMA limit. 2. Best case calculation At best the PIF are completely evenly distributed between the 8 ECC blocks, so we can divide the reported number by 8: Best-case Max PIF (Sum1) = 1/8 * Reported PIF (Sum8) If the best-case calculated Max PIF (Sum1) is at the ECMA limit of 4 PIF, there's very little confidence that the real PIF (Sum1) seen but not reported by the drive is also within the ECMA limit. If the calculated Max PIF (Sum1) is above the ECMA limit of 4 PIF, there's 100% confidence that the real PIF (Sum1) seen but not reported by the drive is also above the ECMA limit. 3. Statistical calculation If we know or make reasonable assumptions about the distribution of PIF it would be possible to calculate with a certain probability what the largest PIF per 1 ECC block is (Sum1), given the total over 8 ECC blocks (Sum8). An attempt at such a calculation can be seen in this thread: Probability Analysis of 8 ECC block versus 1 ECC blk scans According to that analysis, there's a 70% probability of the highest PIF (Sum1) being 4 or less if the PIF (Sum8) is 16, and there's a 99% probability of the highest PIF (Sum1) being 4 or less if the PIF (Sum8) is 8. Depending on which probability is acceptable, a divisor can be selected. Here are the two examples: Probable Max PIF (Sum1) <= 1/4 * Reported PIF (Sum8) at 70% confidence Probable Max PIF (Sum1) <= 1/2 * Reported PIF (Sum8) at 99% confidence 4. Empirical value Instead of calculating the value theoretically you can analyze a number of Sum8 and Sum1 scans on the same drives, which is e.g. possible using KProbe2 on LiteOn drives, and then arrive at the experimental value for Sum8 that is the closest equivalent to the 4 PIF limit for Sum1 scans. I don't think this has been attempted in a scientific way, but Erik Deppe (the author of Nero CD-DVD Speed) has come up with the "max 16 PIF per 8 ECC blocks" rule for CDSpeed Disc Quality Scans, and many people on the forums have found that this is a reasonable approximation. CDSpeed Max PIF (Sum1) = 1/4 * Reported PIF (Sum8) However, as I said at the beginning, it is theoretically impossible to perform the reverse calculation from Sum8 to Sum1 accurately. Last edited by DrageMester; 25-09-2006 at 00:36. Reason: Added notes about confidence levels, corrected typos, added examples | ||
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| | #42 (permalink) |
| Administrator and Reviewer Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Scotland, UK
Posts: 8,598
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Thanks again everyone for your comments. It's getting late here so i'll briefly attempt to answer some questions raised. @Quema34 The batch of CMC MAG AE1 i have is ok but not fantastic. I have a few left from an older batch which are much better, but there was not enough of them to conduct the tests. @Matth Regarding drives being harsh with the calibration points. Yes indeed, there are many theories why this happens, but i would not like to speculate on this. @dodecahedron Regarding CD-Speed Vs KProbe. KProbe is designed by Lite-On engineers for Lite-On drives and as i stated in the article, we used in-house software where available. In my experience, CD-Speed and KProbe show very comparable results in any case.
__________________ My Review PC & Optical Drives We came to wreck everything and ruin your lives, God sent us To become a member of cdfreaks.com just click here to join The Forum Rules The NEC/Optiarc F.A.Q. Liggy & Dee's NEC/Optiarc Firmware Page |
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| | #43 (permalink) | |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: May 2005 Location: Western Europe
Posts: 6,278
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Quote:
Everyone has to remember that discs with somewhat marginal overall quality or burning quality are less consistent in scans than better discs (overall better, or better burnt). There is no reason not to think that the behaviour of 8X scanning (including the Benq scans that I know rather well) is actually to blame, in many instances, on the media/burn rather than on the drive. This seems to be confirmed by many tests I've conducted at even higher speeds scanning (12X and 16X) in my Benq drives, with discs showing very good scans @8X but quite troubled transfer rate tests in at least three drives (NEC 3540, Benq 1640 and BEnq 1650). These discs look bad in 12X and 16X scans despite great scans @8X. The higher scanning speeds show figures that do have a correlation with the real-world reading curve, while the standard speed doesn't show anything special. Discs with flawless TRTs, on the other hand, always pass 16X scanning without any problem. I'm currently more and more rejecting the dogmas of "standard" speeds for scanning. While the standard speeds are OK to compare different burning methods, in my view it fails to determine if the result is actually a good result in terms of real-world reading behaviour of a given disc. Proof of that being that TRTs can be poor despite good-looking scans (at standard speeds) and some discs that look so-so in scans (still at standard speeds) can have flawless actual, real-world operation. This wouldn't be an issue if people used scanning only to choose better burning methods, and would systematically use TRT to get an idea of the actual performance of a disc. Sadly, on this board I see mainly users blindly trusting PIE/PIF scans (at standard speeds) as the one-fits all solution to test media. This is fondamentally flawed and relies more on wishful thinking than anything else. I'm very glad that the article discussed here clearly states that scanning doesn't tell you everything about a burnt disc. This should be evident to everyone, but for some reason it's not , so each time a CD Freaks guru (and I consider Dee-27 as one ) clearly states this, I'm very glad.I know that Dee-27 always asks, in the NEC forum, to produce transfer rate tests in addition to scans. This is very wise in my opinion. I think that the fact so few members of this board actually perform these TRT tests, but rely 100% on PIE/PIF scanning, is the reason why these issues I mention are scarcely discovered and mentioned, and hardly seriously discussed because they're disregarded with some disdain (I hope this is going to change soon). PIE/PIF scanning has become so prominent on this board that many people don't even try anymore to find a real correlation between PIE/PIF figures and real-world behaviour. When was the last time you saw an exhaustive, sound comparison between PIE/PIF figures in scans and actual reading performance? These were the two cents (and a half.. ) from a heretic. ![]()
__________________ Please no help requests by PM, thanks - I won't reply to them anyway! | |
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| | #45 (permalink) |
| CD Freak Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 3,159
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Keep in mind also, though, that a majority (over 50%, well over 50% in fact) of DVDs burned are DVD Video DVDs and they will be read at very slow speeds. While standalone players are pickier readers than DVD drives, a disc that tests out well at 4x or 8x on a DVD drive will usually exhibit no problems in their intended use, very slow speed playback in a standalone player. This is not to say that high speed testing isn't a bad idea as it DOES single out a disc's burn quality or lack of it even more so than 4-8x testing. But a less than ideal test result at a drive's maximum speed does not necessarily indicate that that disc will have any performance problems if it's intended use is slow speed playback. Also, some drives simply do not perform as well as others at reading at their maximum speed so that's something else to be aware of before you get too excited if you get poor tests at maximum speed, sometimes even slowing down slightly such as from 16x to 12x will show a significant improvement in test results. Testing at a drive's top speed is good at separating truly great burn performance from media that may only perform well at slower read speeds. But as I said, depending on your intended use of the disc a good result at 4-8x speeds may be more than adequate. If you are planning on ripping/reading a disc's contents at maximum speed, then obviously full speed testing will be useful. |
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| | #46 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: May 2005 Location: Western Europe
Posts: 6,278
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article To avoid highjacking this thread with high-speed scanning discussions , I opened a dedicated thread with my reply to scoobiedoobie. ![]()
__________________ Please no help requests by PM, thanks - I won't reply to them anyway! |
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| | #47 (permalink) |
| CD Freaks Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Belgium
Posts: 430
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article xcellent work,Dee ![]()
__________________ a8n-e, ht @ 2,4 Ghz , athlon64 x2 4200 @ 2,64 Ghz , 2 gb corsair XMS pc3200 (2,5-3-3-6) @ 480 Mhz , Geforce 6600 gt , wd raptor 150gb , 2 x SATA 200gb WD , SB X-fi , sohw-1653s csot , px716a 0308 1.09 , px760a 1.05 , DW1655 bcgb , samsung 19" tft 930bf "I knew you were up to something, though I'll confess I hadn't thought of necrophilia?" |
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| | #48 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 660
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article Just how accurate is K-Probe, PXScan/PXView, CDSpeed or PTP XL? What speed is best? Is 'Good' testing adequate or should I take the extra time and do 'High' quality testing? I only need to do it to check the quality of a new spindle or if I have questions on the quality of a burn, not for every burn. The disparate though similar error results in the test only show how each drive is testing that particular disc at that particular moment. I would have liked to see one or more of the burned discs tested on a CATS scanner first and the error results used as a 'standard' for comparing the discs with the testing programs and drives. Just to know that a drive is neutral for all media or consistently reads a disc and displays the same error curve for each read doesn't tell me if the results are truly accurate when compared to an industry standard. If one drive or one app was consistent with the CATS tester, I'd be more confident in using that as a test fixture. |
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| | #49 (permalink) |
| CDFreaks Resident Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: EUROPE
Posts: 612
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article I agree with bob11879 The present article is very interesting but the part "read accuracy" should be completed by comparison tests between each drive as scanner and the CATS There has beeen an article about this published on cdfreaks in 21 May 2005: « CATS vs. Home-made scans » http://www.cdfreaks.com/article/202 and a thread of discussion: « cdfreaks presents: CATS vs. Home-made scans » http://club.cdfreaks.com/showthread.php?t=137566 What we need is to put both together |
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| | #50 (permalink) |
| CD Freaks Media Expert Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,714
| Re: CDFreaks Presents: Home PI/PIF scanning article People don't like to understand. Read what I posted earlier on accuracy. Also some newer issues have showed up with calibration points and so causing Benq/NEC drives to react on some burns by some drives. Is this issue ? only one way to tell from low measurement data from CATS or DATARIUS drives !
__________________ ---------------Queensryche OPEN----------------- Open your eyes. Just say what you want to say? Open your eyes, you see yours isn’t the only way . Open your eyes. To you everyone is blind. Open your eyes and your mind. |
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