Construction

The unit ships with only a few bundled features, unlike the ASUS units, which tend to ship with lots of extra recordable media and reading material. Notice that the drive is about an inch shallower than most CDR drives. MSI calls this feature MiniForm, a user-friendly feature for easier installation. While that might be true, more importantly, when producing thousands of units, every little bit helps. Most likely, MSI saves an incredible amount of money just by making the drive a little bit smaller. Several of Lite-On’s newer drives are also manufactured red in similar fashion.


Click to enlarge.


Our drive came with Nero 5.5, an audio cable, screws, the drive itself and installation manuals for Nero and the drive. The majority of the written documentation is actually for Nero rather than the drive installation. MSI includes a fair amount of installation documentation too, but it could be better. What upset us the most was the lack of documentation on the web. In fact, the MSI PDF manual for the CR52-M crashed our newest version of Adobe Acrobat (the error explained something about not having Korean Text support).


Click to enlarge.



Click to enlarge.


The front of the CR52-M resembles basically any other MSI drive. It has two oversized LED buttons, along with headphone jack and volume control. Unlike 24X CDRW drives, the CR52-M sports a new logo. Some of you might remember that 24X CDRW drives tend to say “High Speed” written along the side. OptoRite, Lite-On/ASUS and MSI’s newest 36X CDRW drives replace this with the words “Ultra Speed”. Perhaps when manufacturers obtain 42X rewrite on a CDRW, they will change it to “Ludicrous Speed” or “Ridiculous Speed”?

Below is a quick overview of specifications on the drive:

 MSI CR52-M 52X/36X/52X CDRW Drive
Interface IDE
Write Speed 52X, 48X,
40X, 32X, 24X (P-CAV)
16X, 12X, 8X, 4X (CLV)
Rewrite Speed 32X, 24X (P-CAV)
16X, 12X, 10X, 8X, 4X, 2X (CLV)
Read Speed 52X Max (7800KB/s) (CAV)
Supported Modes DAO / DAO-RAW 16 & 96
TAO
SAO / SAO 16 & 96
Packet Write
MultiSession
Mount Rainier
Supported Formats CD-R
CD-RW
CD-ROM
CD-DA
CD-ROM XA
Mixed Mode
CD-Text
CD Extra
Photo CD
CD-I
Bootable CD
Access Time 90ms
Buffer 2MB
Media 99min (870MB), 90min (800MB),
80min (700MB), and lower

Technically, the drive is virtually identical to the Lite-On LTR-52327S. The OptoRite CW5201 is also very similar, but the MSI drive is slightly more capable with burning more modes like Mount Rainer. All three drives support 99min CDRs, but the Lite-On LTR-52327S is the only drive capable of variable packet writing. Variable packet writing is a feature most people probably do not need, but if it is something you do need, you will not find it on the MSI CR52-M.

Our original drive came with firmware version 1.52, which we promptly updated to 1.80. Unfortunately, MSI’s BIOS update utilities are fairly dated and really leave something to be desired.


Click to enlarge.


Index Error Correction
Comments Locked

13 Comments

View All Comments

  • KristopherKubicki - Tuesday, September 9, 2003 - link

    hehe. Its just a primer for our DVD+/-R reviews. Dont take it too seriously =)

    Kristopher
  • Shalmanese - Tuesday, September 9, 2003 - link

    "Several of Lite-On’s newer drives are also [b]manufactured red[/b] in similar fashion. "

    btw: love the burnproof cartoons! :)
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, September 9, 2003 - link

    Im glad that Anandtech is on track again, the article count is off the charts compared to what it was. I would still like to know what Anand is doing, he's still lurking if you ask me.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now