DVDA 4 won't see burner.

baysidebas wrote on 5/3/2007, 7:56 AM
Imagine my surprise and dismay when DVDA on my shiny new Core-2 Duo installation with SATA raid 0 and SATA DVD burner failed to recognize the burner. I went through everything I could think of, even scrubbing the installation to bare metal and starting all over again. All to no avail, DVDA just doesn't see the drive.

The answer came today, in a posting on CD freaks:

http://www.cdfreaks.com/news/Will-s-ATA-take-definitely-the-place-of-IDE.html
Will s-ATA take definitely the place of IDE?
It is not a secret that all recently manufactured mainboards have only one IDE slot, and this is not really a good news for people with a big stash of burners. In fact, the main issue related with s-ATA controllers is that they are suited purposely to manage hard disk drives (HDD), and not burners.

What is the problem? Simple: optical drives requires ATAPI protocols to work correctly, whereas HDD doesn't need ATAPI at all. So, controller manufacturers are not implementing these protocols in their hardwares. Consequently, s-ATA controllers have an excellent performance with HDDs but can have a lot of problems to work with optical drives.

Besides a less chaotic cabling, however, currently s-ATA optical drives have no real advantages compared to IDE ones. An example can be found on an article published at The Inquirer, in which Asus DRW-1814BLT s-ATA burner was compared with an IDE drive.

Thanks to GristyMcFisty for letting us know about this news.

Guess it's back to IDE for my burner.

Comments

barleycorn wrote on 5/3/2007, 8:39 AM
Actually it's just that the Sony Creative Software applications are very weak when it comes to detecting drives.

We have a Samsung SH-183A SATA drive which works perfectly with every program we've tried apart from those from Sony (we haven't got Sound Forge 9 yet - hopefully some improvements have been made).
ECB wrote on 5/3/2007, 11:19 AM
I have a quad-core Intel core 2 extreme and an Intel 976X MB with all SATA Drives and DVDA 4 burns with no problems. The DVD drive is a Sony NEC Optiarc. There can be problems when you mix SATA and IDE which is why I went all SATA.

Ed
baysidebas wrote on 5/4/2007, 12:50 PM
Gotta love this forum. Less than 24 hours after posting this thread all of a sudden DVDA sees the SATA burner. Not only does it see it but it also burns perfect DVDs on it. Whatever the Mothership threatened my DVDA with after my complaint surely did the trick.