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11.7 Installing and Configuring a CD Writer




In general, installing and configuring
a CD writer requires the same steps detailed in the preceding chapter
for CD-ROM drives. There are, however, some considerations peculiar
to CD writers:

    For ATAPI writers, it is good practice to put the CD writer on a
    different channel from the source device(s). On a typical PC with a
    hard drive, a CD-ROM drive, and the CD writer, make the hard drive
    Primary Master (PM), the CD-ROM drive Primary Slave (PS), and the CD
    writer Secondary Master (SM). This allows you to record CDs directly
    from CD-ROM or from an image stored on your hard drive. If the PC has
    a second hard drive, set that drive to Secondary Slave (SS), and do
    not attempt to record CDs from it. If the PC has an ATAPI tape drive,
    set it to SS. Attempting to record from a source located on the same
    IDE channel as the writer generally works properly with recent
    systems and high-quality CD writers, but often leads to problems on
    older, slower systems and with inexpensive or older-model CD writers.

    If you have IDE bus mastering (DMA) drivers installed, remove them
    from the channel to which the writer connects, unless the drive
    manufacturer specifically recommends using DMA for its drive. We have
    frequently encountered problems with ATAPI writers on DMA-enabled
    channels, even when the writer was recognized by Windows as a
    DMA-capable device. Conversely, make sure DMA is enabled if your CD
    writer manual recommends doing so. Many CD writers faster than 16X
    require DMA mode for proper operation. If you are installing a CD
    writer that requires DMA mode and it shares a channel with another
    device, make sure the second device also supports DMA and is
    configured to use DMA. If the second device operates in PIO mode,
    that forces the channel to operate in PIO mode, which may render the
    CD writer unreliable or nonfunctional.

    SCSI writers coexist well on a host adapter shared with low-demand
    devices or those that will not be used while a CD is being burned,
    but you

    may have problems if you connect the
    burner to the same SCSI bus that supports hard drives. We have
    several SCSI systems with hard drives and CD writers connected to the
    same SCSI bus, and have never encountered a problem with that
    configuration. But we have received enough reports from readers who
    have had problems putting a hard drive and writer on the same SCSI
    channel that we believe this may sometimes be an issue.
    It's OK for a writer to share with scanners, tape
    drives, Zip drives, and similar devices. But if you encounter
    problems sharing the channel between your hard drive and writer,
    install a second inexpensive SCSI host adapter to support the writer
    and other non-hard disk SCSI peripherals.

    When you install a SCSI burner, never depend on the SCSI drivers
    supplied with the operating system. The bundled drivers are fine for
    hard disks and low-demand peripherals, but often have bugs and
    missing features that cause problems with CD writers. Download the
    latest drivers and ASPI files for your SCSI host adapter from the
    manufacturer's site.

    Writing CD-R discsand more so writing CD-RW
    discsgenerates considerable heat. Mounting the CD writer above
    other drives permits the heat to dissipate. If possible, mount the CD
    writer in a drive bay with unoccupied bays above and below it
    (particularly above it). If you frequently burn two or more CDs in
    quick sequence, install a drive cooler. PC Power & Cooling
    (http://www.pcpowercooling.com/)
    makes the best ones.

    Some CD writer manufacturers recommend specific registry tweaks or
    configuration changes to the operating system to support their drives
    optimally. Although we would never discourage anyone from following
    the manufacturer's advice, our experience is that
    these changes have little benefit on high-end (fast CPU, lots of
    memory, SCSI, Windows NT) systems, but are worth implementing on
    low-end (slow CPU, minimal memory, ATAPI, Windows 9X)
    systems.



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