T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1424.1 | | EEMELI::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Mon May 22 1995 17:59 | 8 |
1424.2 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon May 22 1995 18:22 | 7 |
1424.3 | Philips 522 | NOVA::ARNOLD | | Tue May 23 1995 01:00 | 16 |
1424.4 | | EEMELI::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Tue May 23 1995 02:04 | 4 |
1424.5 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Tue May 23 1995 13:58 | 16 |
1424.6 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Tue May 23 1995 16:38 | 12 |
1424.7 | Other applications for the technology | MLOBU1::BROOKS | Phasers don't kill, people kill | Tue May 23 1995 21:54 | 15 |
1424.8 | | NOVA::ARNOLD | | Wed May 24 1995 00:49 | 7 |
1424.9 | | MLOBU1::BROOKS | Phasers don't kill, people kill | Wed May 24 1995 21:54 | 2 |
1424.10 | Available from Digital | NEMAIL::KENT | Peter Kent, DFS, DTN 255-2407 | Mon Aug 12 1996 11:45 | 5 |
1424.11 | | TAPE::PETERS | | Mon Aug 12 1996 15:49 | 15 |
1424.12 | 2x6 experience? | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Mon Jan 20 1997 16:23 | 19 |
1424.13 | CD-R's, any special software needed?? | NWD002::GRANGRUTH_DO | | Mon Jan 20 1997 23:12 | 7 |
1424.14 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Mon Jan 20 1997 23:24 | 9 |
1424.15 | Terminology. | WAYLAY::GORDON | Resident Lightning Designer | Tue Jan 21 1997 09:00 | 18 |
1424.17 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Tue Jan 21 1997 09:31 | 14 |
1424.18 | Horror story with Corel CD-R software | KETZEL::CHAFIN | | Tue Jan 21 1997 12:22 | 30 |
1424.19 | am I gonna' need sumthun'??? | NWD002::GRANGRUTH_DO | | Tue Jan 21 1997 13:16 | 13 |
1424.20 | reliability is the key (for me) | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Tue Jan 21 1997 13:59 | 8 |
1424.21 | SONY mechanism | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Tue Jan 21 1997 14:06 | 11 |
1424.22 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Tue Jan 21 1997 16:17 | 18 |
1424.23 | | PAMSRC::XHOST::SJZ | Rocking the Messaging Desktop ! | Wed Jan 22 1997 00:09 | 20 |
1424.24 | "Pro" does all you mentioned non-pro didn't do | TALLIS::MARRA | | Wed Jan 22 1997 09:08 | 7 |
1424.25 | Explorer crashes with CDR-FS | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Mon Mar 03 1997 10:14 | 21 |
| Well I took the plunge. I went with a Smart and Friendly 1002 (2x2).
So far I have made 1 CD using CDRFS and 1 based on ISO standards.
Both worked fine... Although Easy CD-Pro I wound up recording at 1x
speed because I kept getting 'buffer under run warnings' during the
testing phase. (Hard to belive with a system that has 72 Mb memory, 133
Mhz Pentimum and writing from a 'created image')
I do have 1 'minor problem'... When using CDRFS, and Explorer I can
check 'properties' to see how much free space is left on the CD-R. If I
then dump some data onto the CD-R (Like this weekend I archived over
100 floppies!) I then go back to Explorer and click properties it crashes
(don't recall the specific message but it drops to an all Blue Screen
and brings up an exception message) the only recovery is a 'Hard
Reset'. (hitting return brings me back to W95 but all my shortcuts are
gone and using the Start - Shutdown only cause the system to 'hang
forever in the shutdown phase'.
Anyone else seen this with CDRFS? (V1.0 came with the unit)
Jim
|
1424.26 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Mon Mar 03 1997 11:34 | 11 |
| What's your hard disk? Sounds like it's not fast enough... Common with
IDE disks, BTW.
Go thru the EASY-CD Pro help on buffer underruns - ther are a number of
things you may be able to do to improve things.
There is also a lot more info on the Adaptec Web site (they bought
Incat systems)
Chris
|
1424.27 | At some point I'll just try a 2X Write | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Tue Mar 04 1997 09:38 | 15 |
| I have three drives all are IDE. The newest drive is 2.1 GIG which has
a transfer rate about double of the 'required' speed. I did the
defrag (even tried creating an ISO image on the hard drive)... kept
failing during the testing phase (by the way it ran greater than 60%
through the test both times before it failed.)
Personally my gut feel is the 'problem' is more likely with the test
program than my system's ability to keep up. Eventually I just told it
to write single speed and not bother with the test. Next time I just
may tell it to write the CD at 2X and see what happens...
I wish CDR-FS was the standard it works great (except for the
Properties/Crash problem in my original note ;-) )
Jim
|
1424.28 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Tue Mar 04 1997 09:50 | 24 |
| re: .27 by CHOWDA::FAHEY
Jim,
On an IDE system without DMA, the cpu does a bit more work. Things are
a little better with SCSI. Also, you're running Win95, right? There
may be some 16-bit code still in use that's taking up more than its
fair share of the processing power. Make sure you have nothing running
that isn't absolutely necessary. Use CTL-ALT-DEL on Win95 to see what
else is running. If you have Find Fast, get rid of it.
I have the same drive as yours running on NT 3.51 SP5 and it works fine
at 2X.
>> ...not bother with the test...just may tell it to write the CD at 2X
>> and see what happens...
I think what will happen is that you'll waste a CD-R disk, but it's up
to you. The test is a pretty good simulation of whether you can supply
data to the CD-R fast enough.
Cheers,
/Bill
|
1424.29 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Tue Mar 04 1997 10:22 | 23 |
| I'll second Bill's comment - if the test run fails, you will almost
certainly have a failure if you try to burn a disc.
The test run is done -exactly- as if you were really burning the disc,
but with the laser power set low enough that it does not actually write
the disc. The data is transfered to the drive, thru the drive buffers,
to the laser, all at the proper speeds. The drive is spinning the
media, following the track on the CD blank. If it runs out of data, you
get an underrun. It will do the same if the laser is on at full power.
If the media is too small, it will detect that at the end of the test,
if not before.
I'm in the process of trying to put together a CD-R package for Digital
as I write... Getting a reliable combination of drives, SW,
controllers, and system configs is non-trivial, as I am unfortunately
finding.
Win95 is probably the easiest of the O/S's to support - with enough CPU
and memory, things work most of the time. NT, with its multi-tasking,
seems to be a bit harder to make work.
Chris
|
1424.30 | Same problem ... | LANDO::JBENNETT | | Tue Mar 04 1997 12:46 | 8 |
| I also have the S&F 1002, and found that I had to record at 1x as
well. This on a Dell Dimension XPS166s system that is just a little
under a year old. I also found that I had to CTRL-ALT-DEL and stop
all active tasks (except Explorer!) to ensure a successful burn-in!
Ah well.
john
|
1424.31 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Tue Mar 04 1997 12:56 | 10 |
| re: last few
I guess I was lucky to get it working on NT. Funny, I would have
thought NT's multitasking more reliable than Win95's.
My system's a P133 with on-board ultra-wide SCSI, but the disk is just
a good plain old 7200rpm narrow SCSI Seagate. The CD-R is on a
separate PIO SCSI controller.
/Bill
|
1424.32 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Tue Mar 04 1997 12:59 | 8 |
| The multitasking problem seems to be that you can get swapped out if
too much else is going on... It's easier to lock out the other
processes in '95.
What are you using for SW, Bill? (just curious...)
Chris
|
1424.33 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Tue Mar 04 1997 16:04 | 8 |
| re: .32 by LEFTY::CWILLIAMS
>> What are you using for SW, Bill? (just curious...)
Just the no frills Incat software that came with the Smart and Friendly
bundle.
/Bill
|
1424.34 | seen similar problems using adaptec software | SUBSYS::MSOUCY | MentalmETALMike | Wed Mar 05 1997 07:41 | 9 |
|
We've seen problems with a Sony 2x writer (not sure of read speed) when
using an internal SCSI cdrom (2x) through an adapter to the external
writer where doing 2x gives us buffer failures and trashes the media
making it unusable. If we run it with the test run and then copy and 1x
speed it works fine for regular cdrom media and takes approx. 74 mins
to complete.
|
1424.35 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Mar 05 1997 07:54 | 6 |
| re: .34 by SUBSYS::MSOUCY
You need a 4x reader to do CD-to-CD-R writing at 2X. I've done it
with no problems.
/Bill
|
1424.36 | Not out of the woods yet. | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Wed Mar 05 1997 12:34 | 36 |
| Based on all that I have read in this notes file I went home last night
and tried a couple of things.
1. I did an end task on everything except explorer.
(two Clean Sweep programs, System Agent, and OCRware (for my scanner)
I then created 270 meg of dummie data....
Did a 'speed test' which said I should be able to write at 4x on the
FLY!
Started a write test at 2X which failed after about 20 minutes. (Buffer
Under Run) Selected the option to try the test at 1X. It also failed
after a similar time period. (with buffer under run)
I tried building the ISO image on Hard Drive (actually a couple of
different hard drives) but the CD-R write test failed at 2X and 1X.
I reduced the size of the Data Set to about 170MB and got a successful
test of write on the fly at 2X!! Tried it again and it failed :-(.
At this point I suspect that I am having a problem with the infamous
'Thermal Recalibration'. I do hear a lot of drive clicks as the failure
is occuring but it's hard to tell if the hard drive activity is the
cause or the result of the failure.
I will fix this problem (hopefully without having to purchase a new
computer....;-) )
Jim
P.S. Ignoring the CD-R issues for a moment I have noticed that from
time to time my system will have lots of disk activity for no apparent
reason... For example an application that normally takes only a couple
of seconds to open will take 15-20 seconds while lots of disk thrashing
is going on... Any thoughts?
|
1424.37 | | TUXEDO::WRAY | John Wray, Distributed Processing Engineering | Wed Mar 05 1997 12:55 | 12 |
| > At this point I suspect that I am having a problem with the infamous
> 'Thermal Recalibration'.
If you think that's to blame, just leave your PC on for a couple hours
before you try to burn a CD-ROM. The internals should be at a nice
steady state by then.
I have an old Quantum drive in one PC that used to do this every five
or ten minutes. Now this machine is left running 24 hours a day, I
hardly ever hear it re-calibrating itself.
John
|
1424.38 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Mar 06 1997 08:29 | 7 |
| One thing I would do if I were burning CD-ROMs and had either Office-95
or Office-97 installed:
Find FINDFAST, and nuke it. It'll come up about once an hour and beat
the crap out of your hard drives. It's certain to disrupt a CD-ROM
burn. While you're at it, killing the system agent probably wouldn't
hurt, either.
|
1424.39 | Lots of info at Adaptec Site | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Thu Mar 06 1997 09:54 | 24 |
| The saga continues.... but I'm getting close...
I have finally been able to get to the Adaptec Web Site and there is a
lot of information regarding 'buffer under runs' and Win95. It
certainly does mention FASTFIND but many other disk and cache related
parameters are also discussed.
It really appears (as I had suspected) that the problem is related to
Win95 waking up and trying to do something while the CD burn is in
progress.
For the record I tried one of those 'don't do this at home' things last
night. I turned off Virtual memory. For the first time I was able to
successfully do two 'test burns' at 2X!!! Then turned VM back on and it
failed!!! sounds good right? Turned VM back off and system 'locked'
during burn. Hard re-set re-try... (VM still off) buffer under run
^%&^%*(&)(*&...
I liked computers better in the days when you could conduct an
experiment and get the same ouput based on the same input... Nowadays
it seems the typical WIntel system has has a random results
generator...
Jim
|
1424.40 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Mar 06 1997 10:11 | 2 |
| Well, yeah, W95 is fond of spontaneously reorganizing its paging file,
just to get in your way.
|
1424.41 | I can't spell insight | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Thu Mar 06 1997 10:14 | 21 |
| re: .39 by CHOWDA::FAHEY
>> Nowadays it seems the typical WIntel system has has a random results
>> generator...
Bill Gates would rather you call them Operating Systems. ;-)
While doing some video capture work on Windows for Workgroups, I
discovered some rather counter intuitive (to me) bits of information
relative to caching. It turned out that I got smoother data flow with
caching turned off. It appeared that the steady state flow of data
from the video capture device, plus the bursts of data when the cache
started to fill up caused a bottleneck getting to the disk, thereby
causing dropped frames. I suppose if the cache were smarter, the
bunching up of data would not have happened. This was with Workgroup's
32-bit file access by the way. I did not see any way to affect cache
policy, whether write through (preferred in this case) or write back.
I'm not sure if this applies to Win95, but it may give some insite.
/Bill
|
1424.42 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Mar 06 1997 10:40 | 4 |
| I've had the same experiences doing video captures. Only problem is that I
can't figure out how to disable the disk cache on W-95, which is rather
moot anyway, 'cause W-95 has recently decided to pretend my capture board
doesn't have a proper IRQ assignment anymore.
|
1424.43 | VCACHE | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Fri Mar 07 1997 09:08 | 48 |
| Well I finally found some useful technical information. it's a users
helping users file on the adaptec web site. (heaven forbid that any of
the manufacturers would publish something useful for buffer under runs
on W95 ;-) )
1. Turn OFF auto insert notification on all CDs (recorder and ROM)
2. If you have Microsoft office installed, find the 'Fast Find' utility
and kill it. (Fast Find apparently wakes up periodically and causes
disk activity while it re-indexes.)
3. Don't let W95 control the size of your disk cache!! (I think this
was my problem) Apparently when you are doing a lot of reading W95 may
take all available memory as disk cache!. At some point this
consumption of memory could cause either paging or swapping. The Theory
is that this won't 'normally' happen except when doing something like
reading hundreds of megabytes. To control the cache size edit the
SYSTEM.INI file.
Find the VCACHE section... The section is there but there are no
entries in it.
add a min file and max file line
[VCACHE]
MinFileCache=512 (Do NOT use 0 this will cause WIN95 to manage your
cache)
MaxFileCache=16384 (Rule of Thumb use 25% of physical memory, in my
case I have 72MB total - 16MB cache)
(There is also a reference to making the swapfile MIN and MAX the same
value. This apparently will prevent W95 from 're-sizing' the swap file
in the middle of the burn.... I did not do this as I don't like to
change too many things at once when I'm in trouble shooting mode)
After editing the file and re-booting (of course) I did a test burn of
about 300 Meg. It ran fine!! I can also tell you that the behavior of
the hard drive during the burn is much differnt than it was. The drive
now does more frequent reads for shorter periods of time. (this is
based solely on observing the disk activity light). This would seem
contrary to what you want to accomplish but it apparently prevents the
system from paging which is a possible cause of buffer under runs.
So far this works for me!! (one test doesn't necessarily prove anything
but I have good vibes about this)
Jim
|
1424.44 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Fri Mar 07 1997 11:17 | 9 |
| re: .43 by CHOWDA::FAHEY
Those tips make a lot of sense to me. I use the MIN=MAX pagefile
setting on NT to prevent fragmentation, but I suppose it helps by
not requiring the O.S. to resize as needed.
Cheers,
/Bill
|
1424.45 | speed of the system? | PTOSS1::MATSCHERZ | | Fri Mar 07 1997 11:57 | 10 |
| re .43.
I've got another question that would go along with that too....
Do you notice (just a guess would be ok.. I guess..) if the system
speed is any different as a result of the changes you made? One might
think that if the system had to do less overhead you might notice a
difference in speed too.
L8tr..
SteveM....
|
1424.46 | Subjectively ... It seems faster... | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Fri Mar 07 1997 16:04 | 26 |
| Well the short answer is yes. BUT... I finished my 'test burns' around
10pm and didn't really do anything in the way of running
applications... It did 'feel' like windows were popping open a bit
faster etc.
When I ran shut down the, message "It is now safe to shut
down" 'seemed' to occur much faster than I have ever seen it before....
I think this is one of those cases where large memory systems (ie
greater than 32MB) haven't been heavily tested in the W95 environment.
I can see where there can be a whole set of tuneing parameters that are
based on a 16MB system and not optimized to take advantage of larger
memory configurations...
By the way I have not seen much comment on the Sony CDR File System
(CDRFS) It came with my unit (at first I thought it was a driver). I am
just curious as the 'buffer under run' problem does not seem to be an
issue with CDRFS. I have made one CDRFS disk... I was curious as to what
'formatting a CD' was all about. I have added to that disk many times
and am getting close to 'freezing it'. I realize that it's not an ISO
disk but it would seem that what ever they are doing that doesn't
require a 'continuous burn' should be applied to creating an ISO
standard disk. (I guess it has something to do with creating 'tracks'
versus a helical type write..?)
Jim
|
1424.47 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:43 | 20 |
| The Sony CDRFS is a "packet write" file system for CD-R's. It writes
data in smaller packets, which are always smaller than the drive's
buffer size, so the data can be fully transferred to the buffer before
writing. Buffer underruns cannot happen if the data is written this
way, but there is a significant capacity overhead.
CDRFS is Sony proprietary, and incompatible with anyone else.
The standard filesystem for packet write, CD-E, and DVD is CD-UFS
(universal file system), which is being implemented by Microsoft, all
the CD-R SW vendors, the DVD consortium, etc... It will probably be
available in the next few months.
The standard is online at www.osta.com, available for download.
Also look at www.cd-info.com for more refernce info on CD and DVD
technology.
Chris
|
1424.48 | Final? Update | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Wed Mar 26 1997 09:41 | 35 |
| My last (I hope) update on CD-R technology. As a point of reference my
system is a Starion 942 (133 Mhz) 72MB memory. I use the Smart and
Friendly 1002 (2X2) CD-Recorder with the included Adpaptec SCSI
controller (ISA version).
I have burned 3 CDs at 2X, on-the-fly, without any difficulties.
(Coasters=0) I made extensive use of SYSMON and the 'TEST WRITE'
feature of Easy-CD Pro. When I do a 'Test Write' SYSMON is all 'Flat
Lines'. Disk Reads, Writes, Swapfile size, etc are all stable during
the test. (I do not run SYSMON during an actual burn.)
For anyone considering CD-R technology I would strongly urge you to use
the adaptec web page technical information and review it carefully. If
you are not comfortable altering the system parameters discussed there
then stay away from CD-R technology and WIN95.
The highlights once again were.
1. Stop all background processes (CTRL-ALT-DEL end all tasks but
Explorer)
2. Modify the minimum Virtual Memory to be greater than what is needed
when burning a CD. (you don't want the swap file to re-size up or down
during the burn)
3. Defrag Defrag Defrag (even if it says drive is 0% fragmented)
4. Source Disk should have a cluster size of 16K or less. (ie partition
your 1Gig and larger drives) I created at 650 MB partition as my source
for CD-R input.
5. Esatblish a minimum and maximum read file cache size.
Jim
|
1424.49 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Mar 27 1997 08:35 | 4 |
| All good pointers, and well appreciated.
If you ever try this under NT, I'd be interested in a similar list of
pointers.
|
1424.50 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Thu Mar 27 1997 09:52 | 12 |
| We're doing evals on NT CDR SW also... Adaptec's Easy-CD Pro seems to
be the best implementation we've seen so far, for both W95 and NT.
Heavy network traffic will likely cause problems during a burn. Non-DMA
SCSI controllers cause problems. ATAPI source CD's, or IDE disks of any
sort degrade the margins also...
But it all works. No frisbees yet, and we've been trying to make it
fail.
Chris
|
1424.51 | | AXEL::FOLEY | http://axel.zko.dec.com | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:13 | 14 |
|
We have a 486 running Windows NT and Gear by Elektroson. It
works well. The system disk is an IDE disk and we also
have a SCSI controller. On the SCSI controller is the burner
(a Phillips 522. BIG thing), a CD drive and 2 SCSI hard disks.
These are used for staging the files to be burned and for
creating the physical image file which the CD burns from.
This cuts down on all the problems of network delays. All the
traffic stays on the SCSI bus. It's worked flawlessly for
well over a year.
mike
|
1424.52 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:40 | 9 |
| The network issues I mentioned in .50 are due to network traffic eating
CPU and system resources, not transferring data to the CD-R over the
network. I was assuming that you were doing local mastering.
Mastering from the network directly -will- cause production of
frisbees.
Chris
|
1424.53 | | AXEL::FOLEY | http://axel.zko.dec.com | Thu Mar 27 1997 13:19 | 4 |
|
Which is why the configuration I have includes the staging
disk. Move your files there first, then burn.
|
1424.54 | Another CDR package | STAR::BUDA | I am the NRA | Tue Apr 01 1997 00:40 | 8 |
| For those who are interested in another package, written for a former Digit:
See www.mainstream.net/goldenhawk
I know there is some free software there. This is one of the few packages that
will copy almost ANY format music or otherwise...
- mark
|
1424.55 | JVC 2010 experiences | FSCORE::KAYE | It's only a pilot... | Sun Jun 01 1997 11:33 | 39 |
| 3 of us have tried a JVC2010. It came with v4.03 of their Personal
Archiver. This didn't work with NT 4 at all. We called JVC and they
said we would get a free upgrade to v4.1 (NT4 support) if the drive
was manufactured after Aug 96. We send the serial #, but they replied
saying they couldn't find it & it was possibly OEM'd by HIVAL. We
contacted th eplace where we bought it & they gave us a beta copy of
Adaptec's Easy CD Writer.
#1: P166 w/64MB Symbios SCSI
The attempt to use v4.03 completely screwed his system &
he rebuilt from scratch. With Adaptec software he got through the
test mode, and it failed about 10 minutes in - scratch 1 blank! He did
get it to write 1 CD.
#2: 486/133 Adaptec 1540
Win95 - worked fine using JVC software (v4.03)
NT4 - worked fine too (CD->CD)!
#3: P133 w/64MB Symbios SCSI (always CD->HD->CD)
NT4: The Adaptec software continually failed with insufficient memory
during the test phase.
Win95: JVC software failed during the test phase
Adaptec software actually started the test phase but failed
Got JVC V4.01 from HIVAL
NT4: Testing phase got to 99% before reporting an error - same the 2nd
time, after that it died immediately test writing the lead-in track
Win95: - same lead-in error
tried another blank with the same results
#1: 2nd attempt
NT4: Test phase worked fine - wrote CD - no errors - can't read CD!
We have had enough. We are going to return the drive tomorrow are
looking for a drive/software combination that will work reliably.
mark
PS 2x, 1x didn't make any difference
|
1424.56 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Sun Jun 01 1997 12:29 | 14 |
| re: .55 by FSCORE::KAYE
There must be a lesson in there somewhere.
e.g. Stick with Adaptec hardware if using Adaptec software ;-)
Cheers,
/Bill (still happy with Smart and
Friendly 2x/2x [Sony mechanism] with
Adaptec Incat software and Adaptec
host adapter; works reliably at 2x
on NT 3.51 Pentium 133 with all SCSI
disks)
|
1424.57 | It took a while to get mine going... | CHOWDA::FAHEY | Are we having 'FUN' yet? | Mon Jun 02 1997 09:11 | 17 |
| Since making the tuning adjustments I referred to in a previous note I
have successfully created 12 CDs. 10 were standard burns, 1 was a music
CD and 1 was a 'mixed mode'. I have had two failures. One failed halfway
through at 2X. The second wrote the CD at 1X but I couldn't read it in
any drive. Both failures were on the same media type. The media
is currently being evaluated by 3M.
Media I have used successfully is TDK and Fuji plus the Smart &
Friendly supplied disk (unknown manufacture)
Windows 95, Digital Starion 942 (133 Mhz), 72 Mb Ram, EIDE hard Drives,
Smart and Friendly 2x4 connected with supplied Adaptec Controller.
Overall very pleased with the drive.
Jim
|