Conclusions

Hopefully, our look at these eight burners was enough to help draw some conclusions about the burner that really is the drive to own. Typically, we do not give out Editor's Choice awards but for this cross-section of burners, we feel there is enough data to provide us with a winner for this holiday season.

Sony's DRU-530A and Plextor's 708A were the most viable opponents in this roundup. However, it is very clear that Plextor's PowerRec II technology isn't just a cookie cutter optimization. Even though the 708A and the DRU-530A are based on identical chipsets, the Plextor 708A smokes the Sony DRU-530A in DVD+R writes and compatibility. The only real advantage of the DRU-530A was slightly higher media compatibility on poorer quality DVD-Rs, and slightly better technical support. Right now, the Plextor 708A is priced slightly better than the Sony DRU-530A ($199 versus $219, respectively, with MIR), but given Sony's leverage, the DRU-530A will probably be priced equivalent to the 708A after the holiday season. Kudos to Plextor for winning our well-deserved Editor's Choice award in this roundup.


For those who argue the NEC and LiteOn burners are “good enough” for $100, we feel that this is partially correct, but you get what you pay for. When you end up spending an additional $50 for decent burning software, the savings from these two burners isn't quite that dramatic. Our issues with customer support and media compatibility were something to be desired as well. Don't forget to check out the following second part of this roundup when we have first generation 8X DVD-R burners to evaluate.

We are not fans of honorable mentions, but we think Nu Tech actually deserves one here. Since they did not have a dual capable firmware in time for our roundup, it would not be fair for us to give them an Editor's Choice award in our Dual Format Roundup. However, if Nu Tech does indeed debut with their dual firmware on December 15th (as claimed), we will re-evaluate their burn speeds and price. After all, Nu Tech does have all the components right for winning this roundup (bitsetting, price tag, performance, software bundle). Good luck to Nu Tech, and we will see them again in a couple weeks.

Not only were we analyzing each individual burner in this roundup, we were also analyzing which DVD forum came out ahead in burn time and burn quality. Compatibility with various DVD drives has become less of an issue with DVD+R lately, particularly due to the die-hard fans and companies who write bitsetting utilities. It is slightly unfair to claim DVD+R the leader in this roundup because DVD-R does not support 8X burn speeds yet, but that is exactly what we feel is correct. Not only does DVD+R excel in 8X burn speeds, but DVD+RW outperforms DVD-RW with 4X and 2.4X burn times versus 2X.

Today, we looked at eight burners that make up the majority of this holiday season's DVD recordable market. Unfortunately, we couldn't include everyone. Within the upcoming weeks, we are anticipating 8X DVD+R and DVD-R capable drives from LiteOn, Pioneer, ASUS, and AOpen. Of course, had we waited for their debut, Anand would be wondering why I charged six dual format DVD drives to his credit card. Stay tuned in the next couple of months for the follow up — 8X DVD-R roundup!

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  • rms - Saturday, December 13, 2003 - link

    Why was there no identification/information on the physical drive used in these products? I'm disappointed.

    rms
  • artifex - Saturday, December 13, 2003 - link

    Have you noticed that if you rip the ISO with DVDD, you need to burn it with that? I had trouble reading a DVD that I burned using Nero, but when I went back to DVDD for the burn it worked fine.
  • KristopherKubicki - Saturday, December 13, 2003 - link

    I use K3B and DVDTools for linux as well. Nero is good, depends on what you end up doing with it though. For ISOs and GIs, DVD Decryptor and Alcohol 120% are my particular choice of poisons.

    Cheers,

    Kristopher
  • sprockkets - Saturday, December 13, 2003 - link

    Haha, for some stupid reason that Sonic Software that came with my Lite On DVD+RW only drive said a new disc was already full or something stupid. Used nero from my other drive and works fine. Nero rocks, of course, under linux with SuSE and K3B and DVDtools it works fine too. Burns for me took around 13.5 min.
  • KristopherKubicki - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Belzer, I emailed Nic about it. I was in fact using 2.24

    Kristopher
  • artifex - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Hmmm turns out my drive is identical to the BTC 1004IM. What can I say? I don't see any drives using that base in the comparison either, though I hardly feel prejudiced against, like the Lite-On people :)

    Anyway, looks like it does what I need it to, even has Mount Rainier support (My RW5125A didn't according to DVDinfoPro), for 1/2 the Plextor or Sony, so I should live with it for a while, right? I mean... I'm used to burning DVDs at 2.4x anyway, and now I can use the - formats (yuck, if I have to).
  • Belzer - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Kristopher: I think the MCC 003 should be identified as 8x in the latest (2.24) version of DVDInfoPro too.
  • artifex - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Jeez, over $10? They must have a built-in Hollywood tax planned.

    I decided I couldn't wait. Fry's had a weird "Emprex" +- brand on sale for $90 before tax here in Dallas. I figure for under $100, I'll not worry about burning it up before Blu-ray... or whatever competes against it.

    I'll let you know how it works... so far I see the websites on the box don't have any info on the drive :( It does seem to have a reasonably complete set of software, though. If nothing else, I can use it a little while and exchange it.
  • KristopherKubicki - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Belzer: Youre probably right. In DVD Info Pro, I got this (14)

    http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/storage/roundu...

    Looks like the discs are just ahead of their time ;)

    Kristopher
  • Belzer - Friday, December 12, 2003 - link

    Thanks for the update, Kristopher! Sorry if I sounded rude in my last post.

    About the Verbatim media:
    MCC 001 = 2.4x, MCC 002 = 4x, MCC 003 = 8x

    Check Philips' list with approved media:
    http://www.licensing.philips.com/services/db/midco...

    or check this thread:
    http://www.cdrlabs.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=13821

    or check Plextor's list of compatible media:
    http://www.plextor.com/english/support/media_708Co...

    or check for yourself with DVDIdentifier:
    http://dvd.identifier.cdfreaks.com/

    Verbatim probably hadn't the new 8x box art available yet so my guess is that they put the sample discs they sended to you in an old case.

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