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LG GCE-8160B CD Burner
Iain Laskey enthuses about LG’s 16 speed
burner
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Product |
GCE-8160B |
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From |
LG |
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Web |
www.lgelectronics.co.uk |
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www.lg.co.kr
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Price |
£89 (PC World
currently selling at £69) |
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Rating |
10/10 |
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Amazing value for money
if ultimate speed isn’t your goal |
There are some very fast CD burners on the market
with several 24 speed units around and faster ones just starting to
be released. For the budget conscious consumer there is a lot of
sense in going for a slightly slower but much cheaper option. The LG
GCE-8160B can be picked up at PC World right now for a mere £69 and
contrary to expectations, it isn’t cheap and nasty.
The box contains the bare drive which sports 16x
CD-R writing, 10x CD-RW writing and 40x reading as well as all the
usual IDE cables, screws and sound card leads. The supplied software
is Roxio CD Creator version 5 which is the latest version although
not the full ‘Platinum’ style. You can still burn almost any type of
CD although some of the more esoteric features such as vinyl
restoration, and Video-CD creation are missing. You can of course
use 3rd party software or upgrade to the full version of CD Creator
5 Platinum. A bonus is a good pair of manuals covering the drive
itself and the supplied software. The latter contains a lot of
useful information for both beginners and experts alike. The package
is rounded off with a CD-RW blank rated at 10x.
Installation was excellent. Windows 98 spotted the
drive with no problems and the software was up and running in
minutes. A refreshingly trouble free experience.
Specifications
As well as sporting a 16/10/40 set of speeds, the
unit uses LG’s version of Burnproof called Super-Link. This feature
ought to eliminate the dreaded buffer under-run problem that used to
plague CD burners. The result is you should never have a burn fail
if your PC can’t keep up the flow of data to the burner. I tried
firing up numerous programs and running some disk intensive jobs
during burns with no ill effects, the data read back fine
afterwards.
One thing that may be a problem for some is that the
slowest the drive will burn at is 4x. This may be a problem if you
are trying to back up certain CDs or ensure compatibility with some
CD players. More on this later.
The front panel contains the usual pair of next
track/eject buttons as well as a headphones jack and volume control.
A pair of LEDs show red when reading and green when burning which
seemed back to front to me.
Performance
This is where the drive truly starts to shine. All
too often you see a printer rated at 10 pages a minute that actually
churns stuff out at a more leisurely four or five. Equally, it is
rare for a CD Burner to go as quick as it claims. Not in this case.
When it came to reading, I actually got slightly better than the 40X
quoted. More amazingly, it managed to do DAE (Digital Audio
Extraction) at this speed, a task which few drives manage at
anywhere near their rated speed. This speeds up copying data from
music CDs enormously when making compilation CDs. The read speed
dropped when reading CD-RW disks but was still very good.
The writing times were also pretty good with an 80
minute CD taking about five and a half minutes to burn on to a CD-R.
CD-RW times are good too and when used with packet writing software
the drive makes a viable backup medium that allows you to simply
drag and drop files on to it when needed.
Another useful feature is the ability to overburn
CDs. Overburning is the slightly risky method of packing more on a
CD-R than it is designed to take. This drive is one of only a
handful that has been found to go as high as 99 minutes on a single
CD-R (tested at
www.tomshardware.com ). I didn’t try
overburning myself but this is worth bearing in mind for music CDs.
It’s not recommended for data or backups.
Backing Up
I mentioned earlier about using this drive for
backing up CDs. A common method for protecting CDs particularly
games is SafeDisk2. To backup SD2 protected titles you need a drive
capable of appropriate subchannel data reading and writing. This
drive comes in two variants, the CED-8160 for the US markets and the
GCE-8160 for elsewhere. It has been reported that only Korean models
of the GCE version supports the required subchannel features.
However, drives sold in Canada have also been found to have this
feature so it’s reasonable to assume that all GCE units can do this.
Furthermore, the CloneCD web site (
www.elby.org/CloneCD/english/cdr_l.htm
) lists the GCE-8160B as being able to read RAW-DAO 96 and write
RAW+96 which translates as all subchannel types. I didn’t have the
appropriate software to test this myself but at this price, it is
worth bearing in mind as a probable feature in UK models.
Conclusion.
If you can live with the 16x speed and to be honest,
at 5 minutes per CD it’s still no slouch, this drive is a major
bargain. The overall speeds for the price plus the excellent DAE and
subchannel abilities combine with the bundled software to make an
excellent excuse for blowing your Christmas money. I did!
Note that if you check their .kr web site for
further information, I had a lot of trouble getting the pages to
view with IE 5.5. You may have better luck trying
www.lgeus.com or using the .co.uk site.
Iain Laskey
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