Hello All:
I have 5 Plextor Plexwriter PX-230A Drives, 3 of which are still in their sealed boxes.
I want to begin ripping my collection of about 1,000 CDs, about 80% classical and 20% rock.
I only want to do this once, so I want to "rip once - rip right".
Thus, I would like to test all of the Plextors, to see which one of them is the most accurate.
Is there a way to do this by testing them all against eachother, or should I just assume that all of them are equally accurate?
Should I just do rips on each one and have the info from each submitted to AccurateRip?
Is there a way just to do the rips and compare the 5 results to themselves without submitting anything to AccurateRip?
'Sorry to be asking these questions, but I have never done any drive testing before, so I do not know the procedure for testing 5 drives against each other.
I have thus far been unable to find any posts here addressing this particular issue.
Sadly, I notice that the venerable 230A has fallen to second place on the 2012 accuracy list, after so many years in first place.
Also, if I am not mistaken, all the "Best Of The Best" 2012 5.25" internal drives are ATA/IDE.
Are there any SATA 5.25" internal drives that are at least 99% accurate?
I just built a new PC with an ASRock Extreme9 motherboard, 64 Gb RAM, Intel Core i7 3.6Ghz X79 LGA2011 CPU and Windows 7 Ultimate.
Unfortunately the Extreme9 does not have any IDE slots.
It is all SATA.
I have tried to get one of my Plextor PX-230s to work on the Extreme9 with an IDE-to-SATA adapter, but no luck.
It would be nice to find a 99% accurate SATA internal 5.25" drive that I could use for my ripping project, since my new Extreme9 PC is faster than my older ones.
Oddly, I have a Sony DRU-810A (which is also on the 2012 "Best Of The Best" list but much lower down than the PX-230A), and I was able to get that to work on my new Extreme9 PC using the same IDE-to-SATA adapter I had tried on the PX-230A.
I think it may have something to do with the fact that the Sony is a DVD/CD drive, whereas the PX-230A is only CD drive.
The addition of the DVD ability in a drive must make it easier for Windows 7 to recognize that drive, than just a plain old CD drive.
I tried a bunch of other DVD/CD drives that I have, and they all worked on my new Extreme9 PC with the same IDE-to-SATA adapter I had tried on the PX-230A, whereas the PX-230A never worked.
Thus, for my ripping project I will have to use one of my trusted old PCs (ASUS P5WD2 Premium motherboard, 4 Gb RAM, 3.2Ghz Intel CPU and Windows XP Pro) that already has a PX-230A installed.
Anyway, if someone could help me with this issue of finding the most accurate of my 230A drives, I would greatly appreciate it.
Thank you very much in advance for your consideration.
Marc
I have 5 Plextor Plexwriter PX-230A Drives, 3 of which are still in their sealed boxes.
I want to begin ripping my collection of about 1,000 CDs, about 80% classical and 20% rock.
I only want to do this once, so I want to "rip once - rip right".
Thus, I would like to test all of the Plextors, to see which one of them is the most accurate.
Is there a way to do this by testing them all against eachother, or should I just assume that all of them are equally accurate?
Should I just do rips on each one and have the info from each submitted to AccurateRip?
Is there a way just to do the rips and compare the 5 results to themselves without submitting anything to AccurateRip?
'Sorry to be asking these questions, but I have never done any drive testing before, so I do not know the procedure for testing 5 drives against each other.
I have thus far been unable to find any posts here addressing this particular issue.
Sadly, I notice that the venerable 230A has fallen to second place on the 2012 accuracy list, after so many years in first place.
Also, if I am not mistaken, all the "Best Of The Best" 2012 5.25" internal drives are ATA/IDE.
Are there any SATA 5.25" internal drives that are at least 99% accurate?
I just built a new PC with an ASRock Extreme9 motherboard, 64 Gb RAM, Intel Core i7 3.6Ghz X79 LGA2011 CPU and Windows 7 Ultimate.
Unfortunately the Extreme9 does not have any IDE slots.
It is all SATA.
I have tried to get one of my Plextor PX-230s to work on the Extreme9 with an IDE-to-SATA adapter, but no luck.
It would be nice to find a 99% accurate SATA internal 5.25" drive that I could use for my ripping project, since my new Extreme9 PC is faster than my older ones.
Oddly, I have a Sony DRU-810A (which is also on the 2012 "Best Of The Best" list but much lower down than the PX-230A), and I was able to get that to work on my new Extreme9 PC using the same IDE-to-SATA adapter I had tried on the PX-230A.
I think it may have something to do with the fact that the Sony is a DVD/CD drive, whereas the PX-230A is only CD drive.
The addition of the DVD ability in a drive must make it easier for Windows 7 to recognize that drive, than just a plain old CD drive.
I tried a bunch of other DVD/CD drives that I have, and they all worked on my new Extreme9 PC with the same IDE-to-SATA adapter I had tried on the PX-230A, whereas the PX-230A never worked.
Thus, for my ripping project I will have to use one of my trusted old PCs (ASUS P5WD2 Premium motherboard, 4 Gb RAM, 3.2Ghz Intel CPU and Windows XP Pro) that already has a PX-230A installed.
Anyway, if someone could help me with this issue of finding the most accurate of my 230A drives, I would greatly appreciate it.
Thank you very much in advance for your consideration.
Marc
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