LiteOn SHW-16H5S
8. CD Writing Quality - Clover System
Review Pages
2. Reading Tests
3. CD Error Correction
4. DVD Error Correction
5. Protected Discs
6. CD Recording Tests
7. CD Writing Quality - Plextools
8. CD Writing Quality - Clover System
9. DVD Writing Tests
10. Supported Media List
11. DVD Writing Quality - Page 1
12. DVD Writing Quality - Page 2
13. DVD Writing Quality - Page 3
14. DVD Writing Quality - Page 4
15. DVD Writing Quality - Page 5
16. DVD Writing Quality - Almedio
17. DVDR DL - Page 1
18. DVDR DL - Page 2
19. Booktype Setting
20. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 1
21. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 2
22. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 3
23. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 4
24. Firmware Hacks
25. LightScribe Feature
26. Conclusion
The Clover System CDX Compact Disc Analyzer is a high-speed tool to quantitatively measure the quality of a CD. It will analyze CD-DA, CD-ROM, CD-ROM XA, CD-I, CD-R, Photo-CD, Enhanced CD and CD-RW discs at 4X, 8X, 24X, 32X or 40X speeds. It effectively measures disc quality by examining the quantity and severity of CIRC errors generated during playback. It also provides the capability to measure signal parameters related to pit geometry, such as asymmetry and reflectivity. When put together, all these facts provide a thorough analysis of disc quality. The Clover System Analyzers can also perform various format-checking tests on data discs, and do bit-for-bit data comparison on all types of CDs. All tests are carried out at a maximum speed of 40X.
CIRC error correction uses two principles to detect and correct errors. The first is redundancy (extra information is added, which gives an extra chance to read the disc), and the second is interleaving (data is distributed over a relatively large physical area). The CIRC error correction used in CD players uses two stages of error correction, the well known C1 and C2, with de-interleaving of the data between the stages.
The error type E11 means one bad symbol was corrected in the C1 stage. E21means two bad symbols were corrected in the C1 stage. E31 means that there were three or more bad symbols at the C1 stage. This block is uncorrectable at the C1 stage, and is passed to the C2 stage. Respectively, E12 means one bad symbol was corrected in the C2 stage and E22 means two bad symbols were corrected in the C2 stage. E32 means that there were three or more bad symbols in one block at the C2 stage, and therefore this error is not correctable.
BLER (Block Error Rate) is defined as the number of data blocks per second that contain detectable errors, at the input of the C1 decoder. Since this is the most general measurement of the quality of a disc, you will find BLER graphs for all media tested below. If you click on the images you can see a more detailed table, indicating error levels. The Red Book specification (IEC 908) calls for a maximum BLER of 220 per second averaged over ten seconds. Discs with higher BLER are likely to produce uncorrectable errors. Al low BLER shows that the system as a whole is performing well, and the pit geometry is good. However, BLER only tells us how many errors were generated per second, and it does not tell us anything about the severity of those errors.
BenQ 80min 52X @ 48X
SKC 80min 52X @ 40X
MMore 80min 52X @ 48X
Traxdata 80min 52X @ 48X
Taiyo Yuden 80min 48X @ 48X
- Summary
A more professional as well as reliable look at the burned media is accomplished through the CDX system, provided by Clover Systems. It seems that both CDX Analyzer and Plextools were not far off. Only the SKC disc had a good quality, while the rest reported E22 and E32 errors.
Review Pages
2. Reading Tests
3. CD Error Correction
4. DVD Error Correction
5. Protected Discs
6. CD Recording Tests
7. CD Writing Quality - Plextools
8. CD Writing Quality - Clover System
9. DVD Writing Tests
10. Supported Media List
11. DVD Writing Quality - Page 1
12. DVD Writing Quality - Page 2
13. DVD Writing Quality - Page 3
14. DVD Writing Quality - Page 4
15. DVD Writing Quality - Page 5
16. DVD Writing Quality - Almedio
17. DVDR DL - Page 1
18. DVDR DL - Page 2
19. Booktype Setting
20. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 1
21. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 2
22. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 3
23. 16H5S vs SA300 - Page 4
24. Firmware Hacks
25. LightScribe Feature
26. Conclusion