Garry Sharp
Lost Cause
If I just burn an audio CD with one track on my PC using the standard Nero programme - would that be "Red Book compliant?" Told you it was a stupid question
SouthSIDE Glen said:If it's just a single song CD-R and it plays in every machine he puts it in, who cares if it's Redbook?
Less flippantly put, are there ever any serious instances where Redbook compliance on a "scratch" CD-R like that is relevant? For example, are there ever any instances where a mastering house/dup plant might actually want to receive a single-track CD, and if so, would any such compliance matter?
G.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Of course there's still bad CD-R media out there, and CD-RW still pretty much sucks, and there's still people who try to push the capacities and burn speeds too fast, and have trouble making proper multi-session/multi-format discs. But as long as you take the needle out of your arm before you burn, it seems like the days of your "average" burning software making a standard audio disc that doesn't play in 100% of playback machines has pretty much disappeared.
G.
My understanding of it is that in and of itself, burn speed is irrelevant. As long as the ones and zeros get etched accurately enough so that they can be read properly by playback machines (even the touchy Marantz's that John mentioned ), what speed they are actually etched at does not matter.7string said:This is something that I've wondered about for a long time and have not asked. And since you brought it up, I'll ask. Does burn speed matter? I mean, I can understand using the fastest tape speed to put as little information as possible to any one sector of tape, but what about CD burning? If burn speed does indeed matter, why? And what is a good burn speed?
With the exact same discalimer as you ...Massive Master said:I'm not nearly qualified to even speculate like this, but if I had to come up with a thesis...
The disc is spinning and an essentially viscous or gelatinous substance is being hardened by pulses of light.
The speed of that spinning (and the centrifugal force caused by it) has GOT to effect something like that...
SouthSIDE Glen said:My point is I have yet to burn or receive a burnt CD-R that was created using any of the major "non Redbook" burners like Roxio, Nero, etc. that had trouble playing on anything from a Discman to a DVD player where the trouble was caused by being non-compliance to Redbook spec. In fact, in the past two years or so, I don't think I've burnt or received a single CD-R non-redbooked drink coaster.
I can't comment on a Firewire burner as I have not used one. All I can contribute to that is that my 24x VeloCD is an internal ATA device in my tower and my 48X VeloCD is an external USB 2.0 device used with my laptop, and I (knock wood) have been fortunate to have had excellent luck with both of them. I have attributed it as a combination of good quality drives with good matching media.mixandmaster said:I said what I said from this observation (based on llimited, non-scientific experience)...I've had better burns with my Plextor premium with files from an ATA drive than over the firewire bus regardless of the speed. I've only used the Taiyo Yudens on this drive, and haven't bothered to document it, but I've checked it enough times to always put any files to be burned on one of my ATA drives and not one of my firewire drives.
Not that this in any way disproves what Glen or John says. It's just an observation.
Massive Master said:For reference discs, it's not worth it to wait. But if a disc is being used as a production master, I've found the most accurate beta and lowest jitter to be at around 20% of a drive's maximum speed (around 8 or 12x on a 52x drive or there about).
I haven't tested dozens and dozens of drives or anything, but from rough tests over several units, there seems to be a sort of "burning efficiency window" at around 8-16x on fast (48-52x) drives.