|  | Posted by GraB on 10/04/58 11:33 
On Thu, 01 Dec 2005 04:48:55 GMT, sales@___Email_Address_on_Web_site(SalesMart.com.au) wrote:
 
 >On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 16:42:41 GMT, spam@uce.gov (Bob) wrote:
 >
 >>On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 14:26:34 GMT, sales@___Email_Address_on_Web_site
 >>(SalesMart.com.au) wrote:
 >>
 >>>By placing the drives in USB2 casings and having 16 USB2 ports on my
 >>>computer. I have the Pioneer DVR-109 as an internal and a LG 4163 as
 >>>the other internal. The rest are on USB2 ports.
 >>
 >>I bet that's some sight.
 >
 >A mess of cables.
 >
 >>
 >>>They all get used as before I place each new order of media I always
 >>>get samples in to make sure the same level of quality still exists
 >>>with that media brand. I do this be testing the media in various
 >>>burners and play back in a Panasonic DMR-E30 recorder, Viewmaster
 >>>VM928 DVD Player, Sony PS2 console and MS XBox. The Panasonic
 >>>recorders are very fussy to what they'll play and so are the consoles
 >>>for playing back video.
 >>
 >>Why not use CD-DVD Speed Quality test
 >>http://www.cdspeed2000.com/
 >
 >Been using that for years. Nero 6.6 has it built into it as well in
 >version 4.01
 >
 >Kprobe is another good program.
 >
 >The best test for playback is trying it on a player that is very fussy
 >and the Sony PS2 console is probably the most fussy out of anything.
 >If it plays in a PS2 it will generally play in anything. Many
 >authoring businesses have a Sony PS2 to test playback.
 >
 >I've seen media that Nero and Kprobe pass but fail in the Sony PS2
 >or Panasonic recorder.
 
 How does Nero Disc Quality test and KProbe 'pass' a disc?  I do not
 see a 'pass' when testing a disc.  I look at the average and peak
 error count:  PI (C1) or the all-important PIF (C2) errors.  The
 standard allows for 280 PI (C2) errors per 8 blocks and 4 PIF (C2) per
 block.  The burns I get with good media average around 2 or less PI
 and 0.03 PIF, which is extremely good.  What is also important is the
 peak value for PIFs.  On some rubbish Laser DVD-R (SKC) discs I had
 when I first started to burn DVDs, had peaks of around 100 PIF, which
 can cause playback problems, though Nero CD-DVD Speed ScanDisc passed
 the disc.
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