Replacement CD-RW - ASUS or AOPEN?

CotswoldCS

Senior member
Sep 14, 2000
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My Mirai 24X CD-RW appears to be developing a fault. It now takes up to 20 mins to burn a CD and I have made more duds than good CDs in the past few days.

I am looking to replace it with either an ASUS or AOPEN 52X drive. LITEON is also a consideration but I understand it is noisy. I would appreciate your comments.

I need something that will also give the best reading speeds for ripping audio CDs using EAC. Does anyone have any experience of either of these models with EAC?

Thanx
 

capricorn

Senior member
May 8, 2003
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Unless you just really want to get a newer CDRW, you might try getting a lens cleaner kit and trying with your CD drive. You may just have a dirt/dust problem. That said, I like ASUS over AOpen for most things. AOpen is a part of Acer and they used to make really crappy PCs, and I know some people who got bitten really bad by them. However, their recent DVD and CD lines seem to be well-liked. I haven't owned one, myself. ASUS motherboards and video cards that I have used are good quality. For CDRWs, I tend to stick with Sony or Pioneer, but I've also got an LG Electronics in one PC and it works well. I used to use HP a lot, but I've had mechanical problems with their drives (motor burn out, mechanism jammed - permanently).

-cap
 

peter7921

Senior member
Jun 24, 2002
225
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I have installed alot of AOpen CDRW's in systems at work, and let me tell you they are very loud, they have this really bad jet sound(hard to explain) It is a very annoying sound. They work fine though. I personally own a LiteOn 52x burner and find it to be quieter than the Aopen, i don't mind it personally. The only time the LiteOn is overbearinly load is when it spins at full speed(but most high speed drives are like that). I don't have alot of experience with Asus drives except for an older one i own myself.

But if noise is your concern then definately not the Aopen. Get the Asus.
 

dunkster

Golden Member
Nov 13, 1999
1,473
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If the higher rotational speeds produce really objectional noise, there are utilities ('CD Speed', etc) that allow you to define max rotational speed of these devices.

Hope this helps!