Do I buy an NEC ND2500A now with only 8x burning speeds or wait a month or two for Dual Layer and possibly 16x burning speed?
Do I buy an NEC ND2500A now with only 8x burning speeds or wait a month or two for Dual Layer and possibly 16x burning speed?
Home cinema: Toshiba 42XV555DB Full HD LCD | Onkyo TX-SR705 | NAD C352 | Monitor Audio Bronze B2 | Monitor Audio Bronze C | Monitor Audio Bronze BFX | Yamaha NSC120 | BK Monolith sub | Toshiba HD-EP35 HD-DVD | Samsung BD-P1400 BluRay Player | Pioneer DV-575 | Squeezebox3 | Virgin Media V+ Box
PC: Asus P5B | Core2duo 2.13GHz | 2GB DDR2 PC6400 | Inno3d iChill 7900GS | Auzentech X-Plosion 7.1 | 250GB | 500GB | NEC DVDRW | Dual AG Neovo 19"
HTPC: | Core2Duo E6420 2.13GHz | 2GB DDR2 | 250GBx2 | Radeon X1300 | Terratec Aureon 7.1 | Windows MCE 2005
Laptop: 1.5GHz Centrino | 512MB | 60GB | 15" Wide TFT | Wifi | DVDRW
i sawe on a couple of sites todayh the 2510 which offers dual layer burning. There is also the probability of a firmware upgrade to allow it to burn at 16x, although at the mo it is ver difficult to get 8x discs.
How can a firmware upgrade allow it to burn at higher speeds? It's a matter of how the laser works surely?
Same with dual layer writing as well surely?
Home cinema: Toshiba 42XV555DB Full HD LCD | Onkyo TX-SR705 | NAD C352 | Monitor Audio Bronze B2 | Monitor Audio Bronze C | Monitor Audio Bronze BFX | Yamaha NSC120 | BK Monolith sub | Toshiba HD-EP35 HD-DVD | Samsung BD-P1400 BluRay Player | Pioneer DV-575 | Squeezebox3 | Virgin Media V+ Box
PC: Asus P5B | Core2duo 2.13GHz | 2GB DDR2 PC6400 | Inno3d iChill 7900GS | Auzentech X-Plosion 7.1 | 250GB | 500GB | NEC DVDRW | Dual AG Neovo 19"
HTPC: | Core2Duo E6420 2.13GHz | 2GB DDR2 | 250GBx2 | Radeon X1300 | Terratec Aureon 7.1 | Windows MCE 2005
Laptop: 1.5GHz Centrino | 512MB | 60GB | 15" Wide TFT | Wifi | DVDRW
If you put the firmware from the 5510 on the 5500A you get dual layer support. Physically they are the same, just with different firmware...
The reason you can burn at higher speeds with firmware updates is because manufacturers find ways to reach the limits of the hardware - then when they devlelop something new they stop trying to make the old stuff go faster, and focus on that. Alas my 8x CDRW drive was top of it's range and so no updates for me!
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)