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Ricoh MP7060S CD-R/RW Review


Review by Paul Qureshi


 The package

Product: MP7060 CD-R/RW SCSI (Retail)
Manufacturer: Ricoh
Date Purchased: July 2000
Price: �120

Spec:
  • CD Writer / Rewriter
  • 6x write, 4x rewrite, 24x read
  • 2mb internal buffer
  • SCSI-II interface
  • Internal drive

Testers system:

See here. Software used was MakeCD.

I got my MP7060S from a trade show in London. Ricoh provide full warranty for one year and tech support via email, the web and phone. Package contains the CD-R/RW, manuals, warranty form, mounting screws, 2x blank CDR media, 1x packet write formatted CDRW media, 3x software CDs with PC and Mac software.

 Main review

CD-R/RW drives have matured a lot since they first appeared. The price has also come down a lot, as demonstrated by the exellent value for money of this drive. Only a few years ago my brother got a 2x2x6 Ricoh drive from Hisoft for around �250. That did include an external SCSI case, but no software.

Getting the drive to work with MakeCD was fairly easy. MakeCD recognised the drive as a Ricoh and used it's special Ricoh drive. This worked for most operations but in particular Disk-At-Once mode didn't work. I tried changing the drive to the standard SCSI-III one and everything worked fine.

The drive is very fast in operation. With the old 2x2x6 drive you would have to wait several seconds for it to read a CD or perform some other minor operation. The MP7060S does this very quickly, so fast you hardly notice. Checking a CDR used to take about 20 seconds, now it takes 2.

The drive is also very reliable in use. It comes with a 2mb buffer internally which at 6x (900KB per second) will give it just over two seconds of burning even if MakeCD can't supply it with data. It also copes with buffer underruns very well and doesn't lock up like some other drives do. The drive can handle dirty or scratched CDs well too, even when reading them at high speeds. For audio ripping it's exellent, I usually manage to rip at around 16x without any clicking or jittering. I think I could probably go a little higher but by HDs and SCSI bus are the main limits there.

The drive seems to be fairly well made. It seems solid and is made of decent quality material. The front of the drive is quite nice, although it could do with some more LEDs. There is only one on the MP7060S which is green when the drive is on and red when it is accessing. I would have prefered a separate light for when the drive is burning, but the single light is adiquate. The drive mechanism is fairly sturdy and comes with clips so that the unit can be mounted vertically as well as horizontally. The front cover of the tray has an air tight seal that prevents dust and the like getting in, a very useful feature IMHO. The drive is also fairly quiet and doesn't produce much heat.

The only real problem I have had with this drive is when trying to burn at high speeds. Normally this is okay, but there are two situations when it can cause problems. Firstly, my CDROM is not very good for audio ripping and only manages about 3x or 4x speed. It usually picks up lots of clicks and jitter anyway, so I usually use the MP7060S to first copy the tracks to HD and then back to a CDR at 6x. This is much faster than forcing the MP7060 down to 2x and produces better results. The other problem I sometimes have is with burning ISO images (i.e. files) to a CD-R/RW. At 6x MakeCD can only manage it with large (1mb+ files) which is okay for MP3s and movies. At 4x (max speed for CD-RW which I use for backups) MakeCD can usually manage to back up some of my HD as long as there aren't too many small files and there is a large buffer (I use a 32mb buffer). These two problems arn't really the fault of the MP7060S, the first is down to my CD ROM and the second the speed of my 060. Maybe someone will do a PPC version of the MakeCD ISO image creator?


 Conclusion

Overall I'm very happy with the Ricoh MP7060S. It's hard to find faults with it. About the only thing I can say against it is that seaking (moving the laser over the CD) sometimes makes a slightly louder noise than some other drives but that's only a very minor critism. The Ricoh web site could probably be a bit easier to navigate and it would be nice if they supplied Amiga software for burning and doing ROM updates. I have contacted them about the latter with a view to doing some software myself, so we shall see.

For anyone looking for a good, fast and Amiga friendly CD-R/RW drive I would reccommend the MP7060S without a doubt!

Overall rating: 5/5

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