Sony BWU-200S Blu-ray Rewritable Drive Review

Author

KIPPER
Retired Moderator & Reviewer
Article posted 12 Jan 08 05:13

DVD+R/RW writing performance

  

DVD-Writing performance

In this test we will measure the time for writing to DVD±R discs. We used Nero Burning Rom to burn an ISO compilation containing 4480Mb of data. We used the Disc-At-Once write method.


DVD+R


DVD-R

Both discs finished in 6 minutes and 10 seconds.

Now let us see how the writing quality is.


Write quality:

Disc Quality Scanning – PI/PO:

DVDs use an error detection and correction system (ECC) which is usually transparent to the end-user, but we can get an idea of the "quality" of a disc by  performing Disc Quality Scanning, which shows how many errors the drive is detecting and correcting behind the scenes.

There are two layers or stages of error detection and correction on all DVD media; these are called Parity Inner (PI) and Parity Outer (PO). Data is arranged in ECC blocks containing rows and columns of user data with additional columns of PI error correction and rows of PO error correction.

An ECC block contains 32 kByte of user data with some added control data, scrambled and arranged in 192 rows and 172 columns with an additional 10 columns of PI error correction and 16 rows of PO error correction.

The Parity Inner stage is performed first, and up to 5 bytes in a row can be corrected. Any row with one or more errors is counted as a Parity Inner Error (PIE). Any row with more than 5 errors is considered uncorrectable and is counted as a Parity Inner Failure (PIF).

The Parity Outer stage is performed next and will detect and attempt to correct any errors that are still left after the PI stage. Any column that has errors is counted as a Parity Outer Error (POE), and any column that has uncorrectable errors is counted as a Parity Outer Failure (POF). If a POF occurs the drive can sometimes re-read the problematic spot and correct the problem; this happens only during normal reading and not during scanning, however.

Disc Quality scanning is influenced by the drive performing the test, and that’s why different drives report different results and even the same drive will report (slightly) different results when scanning the same disc again. Please note that PI/PO and Jitter scans only test some aspects of disc quality and that other important aspects are not revealed.

But what is a good scan? That is a discussion that we don’t think will end soon, as different drives report different amount of errors, some players are more picky about media than others, and so on. But as a comparison we present you with scans from two pressed DVD discs:

This scan above shows the results from a pressed, Single Layer DVD-Video disc (Flicka).

This above scan shows the result from a pressed Double Layer DVD-Video disc (MI3).

The Lite-On DVD burners used in this review report errors as follows.

  • PIE per 8 ECC blocks (rows with 1 or more bytes in error)
  • PIF per 1 ECC block (rows with 6 or more bytes in error)

We want to see as low error numbers as possible.
PIE per 8 ECC blocks should be no higher than 280.
PIF per 1 ECC block should be no higher than 4.

Both the pressed DVD-discs above are well within the standards.

If you want to look at the standards for yourself, download the ECMA 267 Standard for DVD-ROM, the ECMA 337 Standard for DVD+R/RW and the ECMA 338 Standard for DVD-R/RW at http://www.ecma-international.org.

Notice that there are other aspects such as disc reflectivity, tracking errors and so on that also will affect the readability of a DVD disc – but for this we do not have measuring equipment available.

Also, another note is that we have scanned the discs at 4X speed, by lowering the speed to 2X (DVD-R/RW)/2.4X (DVD+R/RW) or 1X the amount of reported errors may drop on some discs. We scanned at 4X CLV due to lower speeds taking too much time.

To see if there is a connection between the reported amount of errors and readability of the discs we also include the reading curve from a BenQ DW1650 DVD-Writer which by default is able to read DVD±R media at 16x speed. A small speed reduction near the end is still accepted on good discs, but serious reading problems or reading failures is a bad sign.

Here is an easier explanation on how to read the test results

Maybe this got too technical, and you are wondering what to look for in your Nero DiscSpeed Quality Scans?

Use this as a guideline for good discs:

  • PI (Parity Inner): No larger areas on the disc should exceed 280 PI-8 errors, do not worry too much about high single spikes that exceed 280.
  • PIF (Parity Inner Failures): No larger areas on the disc should exceed 4 PIF-1 errors, do not worry too much about high single spikes that exceed 4.

And as always: the lower is better. image101


DVD+R media compatibility and write quality:   

In these tests we will be using either the Lite-On DH20A3P  drives along with Nero CD-DVD Speed and DiscSpeed to measure the disc quality. We will provide you with an image of the Quality Scan, TRT, and a Table which gives the pertinent details for the burn and quality scan to include the number of samples taken in the Quality Scan. We will also be using the BenQ DW1650 along with Nero CD-DVD Speed for our read-back tests.

Here is what we discovered:

 

Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

The Sony BWU-200S did a good job with burning this media; highly recommended.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

Higher PIE which follows the increasing jitter, however the read back test is smooth.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

The Sony BWU-200S wrote this Sony media with overall good results.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

Higher PIF towards the end of the burn and the TRT did show dips in the same areas.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

Although one PIE spike is shown, overall the Sony BWU-200S did a good job on this Taiyo Yuden media.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

As expected the Sony BWU-200S does a good job with our Taiyo Yuden 8X test disc.


Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

The Sony BWU-200S did an overall good job burning this media.


DVD+RW media compatibility and write quality

We used the same test procedures as in our DVD+R tests.

Here are our results.

Disc Quality Scan at 4X with Lite-on Drive

TRT with BenQ DW-1650

The Sony BWU-200S did a very nice job with our RiDATA DVD+RW test disc.

Summary

The Sony BWU-200S writes DVD+R/RW media with overall good to very good results on our tested media. 

Now let’s look at DVD-R/RW performance and quality on the next page…..



10 Comments

guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 13 Jan 08 00:29
I have owned this burner for about a week and a half. So far, so good - no coasters burned yet. A good thing with blank media at $15-20USD. My Panasonic DMP-BD10 home player has no problems playing home HD videos burned with the Sony burner. Check out your player's format capability before burning any discs with any BD burner. Some players (like my Panny) will play only BDMV format; some players will play BDAV. This burner will burn either, but some burning software won't support BDAV. I am using Ulead Movie Factory with the HD add-in; it will burn either format. Others have noted that the Sony's drawer won't fit thru a normal cutout - that was the situation with my Dell XPS400. Tried trimming out the hole in the Dell; gave up and mounted the burner in an external enclosure. Overall, thumbs up even at the $600USD price.
Coconut
Posts: 173
Posted on: 14 Jan 08 00:41
Harry, what is the enclosure that you use, please?
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 15 Jan 08 01:58
hmm, as in most of Kip's reviews there are no pictures of the inside of the drive, which in my opinion tells us a lot more about the technology used inside. Not at all interested in how the left and right side of the drive looks like. :c
heroineworshipper
Posts: 41
Posted on: 15 Jan 08 02:23
Only $500 more to go until it's affordable.
DeadMan
Posts: 1629
Posted on: 18 Jan 08 01:43
Cheaper per gigabyte to get an HDD and download x264 rips
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 20 Jan 08 11:56
Ouch! $600, well. it IS a blue ray drive after all.. Yes dvds were crazy expensive too in their day.. but then again the format war is in the midst of Gettysburg battle. So it won't be long before one camp caves in.. and popularity forces price redux.
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 20 Jan 08 22:53
"Harry, what is the enclosure that you use, please?" It is actually a cannabilized external one for a DVD drive. External 5.25" SATA enclosures are a little hard to find and are well over $50 when you do. I had to run a power cable and SATA cable out of the back of the PC and the back of the external enclosure. The enclosure I use has a power switch that is not maintained and the PC showed drive not available when booting if the power was not on. So, I ran an cable from the PC power supply. Kinda junky doing it that way, but it works.
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 08 Feb 08 05:56
The LG GGW-H20L is selling for about $400 on ebay. It can write BD-R at 6x though 6x media seems not available yet. I tried TDK BD-R 25GB 2x certified media using the bundled software power2go. It was recognized as 4x by the software and finished writing a full disc in about 25 minutes. The above review didn't mention TDK BD-R. I wonder how BWU200S would perform with this media.
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 17 Jul 08 22:49
Does it work under 64-bit Windows (WinXP Pro x64 or Vista 64)?
guest
Posts: 15284
Posted on: 18 Sep 08 10:46
Installed in my tower last night and Vista 64 had some issues with the software on installation. had to choose not to install parts of the package but once the rest were installed and upgraded the player for Blu-Ray commercial compatibility the rest of the software installed fine. no problems since then.

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