Does this Burner (IDE) have an 80 pin or a 40 pin connector?
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needs 80 wire cable. both 40 and 80 use same connector.
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"a lot of people are better dead" - prisoner KSC2-303 -
Originally Posted by aedipuss
It's amazing this hasn't become more of an issue that people regularly trip over. By now, most retail box motherboards should routinely include this type of cable, but I'm not at all sure that they do. (Maybe most new buyers have been moving to SATA burners ?) And most of the external enclosures being sold still do not have the right cabling or the right chipset to support these non-SATA burners, which have only been on the market for two years now. I still need to dig through some threads here, to find out just which of these external USB enclosures will work.When in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
You don't *need* an 80 wire cable. 40 wire is capable of UDMA33 (Ultra DMA Mode 2), with a bandwidth of 33MB/s. 16x DVD is ~22MB/s.
If you're buying IDE cables these days, no reason to get a 40 one, but if you have a 40 one lying around, begging to be used, then it's perfectly fine.
However, if you're going to be doing burning and reading simultaneously from devices connected to the same cable, you're probably better off with an 80 wire cable. -
Originally Posted by pepegot1
You should use an 80wire ide cable for the DVR-115. Like Pioneer says itself, "its not mandatory but necessary if you want to burn at higher speeds like 16x!".
Saying that, I can assure you that when you use a 40wire cable with this burner, sooner or later you will have trouble, either by burning with it or trying to flash a new firmware...
Summary: Avoid 40wire ide cables, they are not reliable and not appropriate these days. -
Originally Posted by obs
80 wire ide cables are a must! -
Originally Posted by obsOriginally Posted by budzWhen in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form.
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Pioneer dvd burners since the DVR-108 require a 80wire ide cable and to work in udma4 mode to work properly.
Like Pioneer itself says: "80wire is no mandatory but necessary for higher speeds!"*** Now that you have read me, do some other things. *** -
Originally Posted by [_chef_When in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form.
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Originally Posted by Seeker47
usb EXTERNALS are a special case, most of their chipset just PLAIN SUCK!
That is one reason why I prefer FW & eSATA over usb! -
As mentioned in my other post, I guest I'm just imaginging that my Pio 111 works with a 40 wire cable
. It's the cable that came with my Asus board, BTW.
> Like Pioneer itself says: "80wire is no mandatory but necessary for higher speeds!"
Right, so what you're quoting is that even Pioneer themselves say that an 80 wire cable is not mandatory (ie. not strictly needed). Thanks for making my point.
> Pioneer dvd burners since the DVR-108 require a 80wire ide cable and to work in udma4 mode to work properly.
I don't think anyone is arguing with this. At least, I'm certainly not. Note that I previously said UDMA2 and 40wire.
But whatever. As someone mentioned, we're talking about a 115 here, not 111. No need to get into hysterics about dishonesty, ignorance, etc..
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80 wire cables differ from 40 wire cables by having 40 additional grounds. These additional lines help eliminate induced noise between signal lines. Faster transfers run higher risk of inducing noise.
Although 40 wire cables will work in some configurations, some or almost all of the time, an 80- wire cable is cheap and desirable even as insurance.
Although it will disturb the media gurus, 40 wire cables are why some users get superior results by burning at lower than rated speeds. The cable can't handle higher data transfer rates. -
Originally Posted by oldandinthe wayWhen in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form.
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Originally Posted by SCDVD
112 - 18x
115 - 20x -
Thanks, that's a pretty useless difference. A person shouldn't burn at either of those speeds. The burn quality is not as good. A minute or two improvement in burning speed isn't worth the trade off in the quality of the burn.
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Originally Posted by SCDVD
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I burn at the maximum speed my drive has a write strategy for each media. 16x for CMC, 18x for Verbatim, etc etc.
I do not have any disks fail to burn to completion (except when physical flaws are present). No disks going bad in time. 16x burns - thousands up to 30 months old. 18x burns 6+ months.
Either I'm a lucky SOB, or I'm awaiting the one-horse shay, or quality drives, properly installed, with proper write strategies can yield quality burns with a wider variety of media at faster burn rates than generally thought on this forum.
My drives are not Pioneer. -
Yah we all know your drives are LG which is infamous for not supporting their drives with newer firmware. LG just keeps dishing out new drives and no firmware support for newer dvd media ID.
Your cheap CMC media will sooner or later degrade with time, 30 months is nothing. -
Originally Posted by SCDVD
To sum it up again: You go the way you should by using an 80 wire ide cable with Pioneer burners since the DVR-109/XL. Reason is, first you cannot achieve high-speeds with 40wire ones and secondly, 40wire ones are MOSTLY cheap quality! That makes a huge difference!
*over*
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