Mark Kyrnin
Optical drives vary greatly in computer systems. Most manufacturers tend to only list the type of drive that they include with a system. What they tend to leave out when listing the drives is their various speeds associated to them. When looking at a computer system there are two things to consider: the type of drive and the speeds.
Drive Types
There are three basic forms of optical storage used in computers today: compact disc (CD), digital versatile disc (DVD) and Blu-ray (BD).
Compact disc storage was derived from the same media that we use from audio compact discs. The storage space averages around 650 to 700 MB of data per disc. They can contain audio, data or both on the same disc. Most software for computers was distributed on CD formats. DVD was the development for a compact digital video format that also spun off into the data storage arena. DVD is seen primarily for video and has recently become standard to be used for software distribution. DVD drives are still backwards compatible with CD formats however.
Blu-ray and HD-DVD were both in the high definition format war but Blu-ray eventually won out. Each of these is capable of storing high definition video signals or data capacities ranging from as low as 25GB to over 200GB depending upon the number of layers on the discs. Since the two formats are incompatible with one another, drives may use one or both of the formats.
Now optical drives can come as read only (ROM) or as writers (designated with either an R, RW, RE or RAM). Read-only drives will allow you to only read data from discs that already have data on them, they can not be used for removable storage. Writers or burners can be used to save data, create music CDs or video discs that can be played in DVD players.
CD recorders are very standardized and should be compatible with almost all equipment out there. Some CD burners maybe be listed as a combo or CD-RW/DVD drive. These can support reading and writing to CD media and can read DVD media but not write to it.
DVD recorders are a bit more confusing as there are many more types of media that can be used with them. Most drives at this point can support both the plus and minus versions of the standard along with rewritable. Another new format is the dual-layered or double-layered, typically listed as DL, that supports twice the capacity.
Blu-ray drives typically come in three types of drives. Readers can read any of the formats. Combo drives can read Blu-ray discs but can read and write CDs and DVDs as well. Burners can handle reading and writing to all three formats.
Speed Limit Ahead
All optical drives are rated by a multiplier that refers to the maximum speed the drive operates when compared to the original CD, DVD or Blu-ray standards. It is not the sustained transfer rate while reading the whole disc. To make matters even worse, some drives have multiple speed listings. How does one know what it all means?
Read only or ROM drives can list up to two speeds. For a CD-ROM drive, there is typically a single speed listed which is the maximum data read speed. Sometimes a second CD ripping speed will also be listed. This refers to the speed at which data can be read from an audio CD for conversion to a computer digital format such as MP3. DVD-ROM drives will typically list two or three speeds. The primary speed is the maximum DVD data read speed while the secondary refers to the maximum CD data read speed. Once again, they may list an additional number that refers to the CD ripping speed from audio CDs.
Optical burners get very complicated. They can list over ten different multipliers for the various media types. Because of this, manufacturers tend to just list a single number for the drives and this will be for the DVD media that it can record the fastest at. Because of this, try to read the detailed specs. A 24x drive may run up to 24x when recording on DVD+R media, but it might only run at 8x when using the DVD+R dual-layer media.
What is best for me?
With costs these days for optical drives, there is really no reason that even the least expensive desktop computers should not include a DVD burner. Since a DVD burner can handle all the tasks of the various CD and DVD media, it shouldn't be an issue for most people if they only use it for burning CDs or creating DVDs. At the least, the systems should have the ability to read DVDs as this is now used for distributiong of software and can make it difficult to install programs without the ability to read the format.
For those looking to the high definition formats, it is important to get a drive that uses Blu-ray as the Toshiba led HD-DVD format has officially been pulled from the market. There are still HD-DVD drives available on the market for those that purchased the media. Burners are still quite expensive but they are quickly dropping in price. Of course, the media is difficult to find and quite expensive.
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