CeBIT 2003 Show Coverage
24. Sanyo
Review Pages
2. AccessTek
3. Asus
4. Ricoh
5. Waitec
6. DVD+RW Alliance
7. AOpen
8. Primera
9. ReWritable Products Promotion Initiative (RWPPI)
10. MET
11. Plextor
12. BenQ
13. CMC Magnetics
14. LG
15. INcoder
16. Mitsumi
17. BTC
18. Intenso
19. LiteON
20. Maxell
21. MSI
22. NEC
23. Panasonic
24. Sanyo
25. Prodisc
26. Plasmon
27. Ritek
28. Verbatim
29. Samsung
30. SKC
31. Sony
32. Teac
33. Toshiba
34. Nero
35. TraxData
36. Pinnacle
Sanyo
It's been quite some time now that Sanyo has not announced any new optical disc drives. But it seems that development of new models of the main components of recorders and readers (such as optical pick up's, mechanisms and chipsets) was, and still is in full progress. Our own information is that a new Sanyo pickup is ready and supports both DVD+R/RW and DVD-R/RW writing. Sanyo mainly sells its components through OEM channels and currently many manufacturers plan to use it in their upcoming DVD recorders and other combo's.
This year Sanyo demonstrated its latest recorder as a member of the DVD+RW Alliance. Thus, the company chose to exhibit a drive supporting only the DVD+R/RW format in the new CRD-BPDV2. The drive supports 4x DVD+R and 2.4x DVD+RW writing, and 12x DVD reading. For the CD, the CRD-BPDV2 offers 24x/10x/40x CD-R/RW features and the well-known Burn-Proof, FlexSS-BP and Safe-BP. Speculation says that a simple firmware upgrade will enable recording on both formats.
The most interesting feature of the new drive is the so-called "High Density Recording" Technology or HD-BURN. The HD-BURN technology doubles the recording capacity (up to 1.4GB) on conventional CD-R media (700MB)!
The writing speed under the HD-BURN format corresponds to 24x, while the maximum reading speed reaches 72x!! The BURN-Proof is (of course) supported for the HD-BURN writing, in order to prevent buffer underun errors. Recording on CD-RW media is not currently supported but it will be included with a future firmware modification, at a 24x speed under the HD-BURN mode.
Ahead Nero Burning Rom and BHA B's Recorder Gold will support the HD-BURN in future software versions.
The recorded discs are not compatible with current DVD players, but this can be achieved with some simple modification or even with just a firmware update in many cases.
In the following table you can see a brief comparison between the CD and the HD-BURN recording technologies:
CD |
HD-BURN |
HD-BURN improvement ratio (almost twice) |
|
Minimum pit length |
0.83 µm |
0.62 µm |
1.343 |
Track area |
1.6 ± 0.1 |
1.6 ± 0.1 |
1.0 |
Record area |
25mm in radius |
25mm in radius |
1.0 |
Error correction method |
CIRC |
RS-Product Code |
1.40 |
Storage capacity |
700MB (Type 80) |
1400MB (Type 80) |
2.0 |
As you can see, in order to achieve such a high density, Sanyo has shortened the pit length, the modulation method is different and more efficient, and the error correction more robust.
Review Pages
2. AccessTek
3. Asus
4. Ricoh
5. Waitec
6. DVD+RW Alliance
7. AOpen
8. Primera
9. ReWritable Products Promotion Initiative (RWPPI)
10. MET
11. Plextor
12. BenQ
13. CMC Magnetics
14. LG
15. INcoder
16. Mitsumi
17. BTC
18. Intenso
19. LiteON
20. Maxell
21. MSI
22. NEC
23. Panasonic
24. Sanyo
25. Prodisc
26. Plasmon
27. Ritek
28. Verbatim
29. Samsung
30. SKC
31. Sony
32. Teac
33. Toshiba
34. Nero
35. TraxData
36. Pinnacle