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DISC SIZE, CONFIGURATION AND CAPACITY
What are the physical sizes of CD-R and CD-RW
discs?
Generally, writable DVD discs come in 12 cm (120 mm) and 8 cm (80 mm)
diameter sizes. The most commonly used is the larger 12 cm type which
has the same physical dimension as most commercial video, audio, computer
software and game console DVDs. 8 cm discs are less common and are typically
used in portable consumer electronic devices such as digital video camcorders.
What configurations of writable DVD discs are
available?
Currently, writable DVD discs are single-layer (SL)
products which can either be single (SS) or double-sided (DS). Single-sided
discs are used
in everyday data and video applications while double-sided discs are
more specialized (largely due to the lack of a convenient labeling surface)
and are typically employed in automated storage jukeboxes and in writable
DVD camcorders. In addition, DVD-RAM discs come as bare or can be enclosed
in protective “cartridges”. Some types of these cartridges
may be opened to allow the discs to be removed while others come permanently
sealed. Be aware that not all DVD-RAM compatible drives, players and
recorders accommodate cartridged discs.
DVD-RAM Disc Cartridge Configurations
|
Sealed Cartridge |
Removable Disc |
Empty Cartridge |
Size |
Single-sided |
Double-sided |
Single-sided |
Double-sided |
Single-sided |
Double-sided |
8 cm |
-- |
-- |
|
|
|
|
|
12 cm |
Type 1 (2.6 GB, 4.7 GB) |
Type 1 (5.2 GB, 9.4 GB) |
Type 2 (2.6 GB, 4.7 GB) |
Type 4 (5.2 GB, 9.4 GB) |
Type 3 (2.6 GB, 4.7 GB) |
Type 5 (9.4 GB) |
Are dual-layer writable DVD discs available?
Manufacturers are developing 8.5 GB single-sided (SS) dual-layer (DL)
DVD+R and DVD-R discs for release sometime in 2004 or 2005. Although
they approximate dual-layer prerecorded DVD-9 discs be aware that, due
to various technical issues, such writable discs may not be read compatible
with some older computer DVD-ROM drives and DVD players and they will
not be write-compatible with older recorders. If in doubt, check with
the hardware manufacturer.
What blank writable disc capacities are available?
Manufacturers express disc capacity in terms of how much computer data
a disc can contain. DVD-R (General), DVD-R (Authoring), DVD+R, DVD+RW
and DVD-RAM discs come in 4.7 GB single and 9.4 GB double-sided (12 cm)
and 1.46 GB single and 2.92 GB double-sided (8 cm) sizes.
This has not always been the case for DVD-RAM and DVD-R. DVD-RAM discs
designed for use in early recorders (version 1.0) come in 2.6 GB single-sided
and 5.2 GB double-sided (12 cm) sizes. DVD-R discs compatible with first
generation recorders (version 1.0) come in 3.95 GB single-sided and 7.9
GB double-sided (12 cm) and 1.23 GB single-sided and 2.46 GB double-sided
(8 cm) sizes.
Keep in mind that manufacturers quote the capacity of a writable DVD
disc in decimal (base 10) rather than binary (base 2) notation so a 4.7
GB disc stores 4.7 billion bytes
[4:700,000,000 bytes ÷ 1000 =
4,700,000 KB ÷ 1000 = 4,700 MB ÷ 1000 = 4.7 GB]
. Expressed
in binary notation (as is typical with CD-R, CD-RW and most operating
systems) the same disc has a capacity of roughly 4.38 GB
[4:700,000,000
bytes ÷ 1024 = 4,589,844 KB ÷ 1024 = 4,482.27 MB ÷ 1024
= 4.38 GB]
.
How much information can actually be stored on
writable DVD discs?
The amount of information that can be written is determined by the disc’s
recording capacity as well as the physical and logical formats used.
All writable DVD formats devote the same amount of usable space to data
(2,048 bytes per sector). DVD+R, DVD+RW and DVD-RAM specify the number
of sectors available for user information (1.46 GB DVD+R/+RW 714,544
sectors, 4.7 GB DVD+R/+RW 2,295,104 sectors, 1.46 GB DVD-RAM 714,480
sectors, 2.6 GB DVD-RAM 1,218,960 sectors, 4.7 GB DVD-RAM 2,295,072 sectors)
so disc capacity can be calculated by multiplying the user data area
size by the number of disc sectors. For example, a 4.7 GB DVD+R disc:
2,048 bytes/sector x 2,295,104 sectors = 4,700,372,992 bytes. This rounds
to roughly 4.7 GB (decimal notation).
DVD-R and DVD-RW, on the other hand, do not stipulate the number of sectors
that are dedicated to user information but simply that a minimum capacity
must be available on the disc. In the case of DVD-R (version 1.0) this
is 3.95 (12 cm) and 1.23 (8 cm) billion bytes and for DVD-R (Authoring),
DVD-R (General) and DVD-RW 4.7 (12 cm) and 1.46 (8 cm) billion bytes.
Consequently, real world capacity can vary slightly among discs from
different media manufacturers although many have informally settled on
2,298,496 sectors (4,707,319,808 bytes) for a DVD-R (General) 4.7 GB
disc.
Writable DVD Disc Capacities
(Unformatted Single-Sided, Single-Layer Discs)
Disc Format |
Specification Version |
Disc Size |
Number of User
Data Sectors Per Side |
Gross Capacity
(bytes) |
DVD+R |
1.2 |
8 cm |
714,544 |
1,463,386,112 |
|
|
12 cm |
2,295,104 |
4,700,372,992 |
DVD+RW |
1.2 |
8 cm |
714,544 |
1,463,386,112 |
|
|
12 cm |
2,295,104 |
4.700.372.992 |
DVD-R |
1.0 |
8 cm |
600,586 |
1,230,000,000 |
|
|
12 cm |
1,928,711 |
3,950,000,000 |
|
Authoring 2.0 |
8 cm |
712,891 |
1,460,000,000 |
|
|
12 cm |
2,294,922 |
4,700,000,000 |
|
General 2.0 |
8 cm |
712,891 |
1,460,000,000 |
|
|
12 cm |
2,294,922 |
4,700,000,000 |
DVD-RW |
1.1 |
8 cm |
712,891 |
1,460,000,000 |
|
|
12 cm |
2,294,922 |
4,700,000,000 |
DVD-RAM |
1.0 |
12 cm |
1,218,960 |
2,496,430,080 |
|
2.0 |
12 cm |
2,295,072 |
4,700,307,456 |
|
2.1 |
8 cm |
714,480 |
1,463,255,040 |
Be aware, however, that the logical format (UDF, FAT, HFS etc.) as well
as any defect management system employed consume space otherwise available
for user information. For example, DVD-RAM can dedicate as much as 184
MB (192,937,984 bytes) on a 1.46 GB disc, 126.86 MB (133,022,816 bytes)
on a 2.6 GB disc and 216 MB (226,492,416 bytes) on a 4.7 GB disc for
defect management while Mount Rainier formatted DVD+RW (DVD+MRW) can
allocate up to 128.75 MB (135,000,000 bytes) on a 1.46 GB disc and 515.94
MB (541,000,000 bytes) on a 4.7 GB disc.
How many minutes of video can be stored on
writable DVD discs?
In contrast to CD technology where Red Book audio or Video CD specifications
rigidly prescribe the amount, type and quality of material a disc contains,
the DVD-Video format is flexible, permitting content to be housed in
different forms and levels of quality. Consequently, the number of minutes
of audio and video that can be stored on a writable DVD disc varies considerably.
In terms of its basic capabilities, the DVD-Video format supports one
main stream of video (MPEG-1, MPEG-2) with up to nine separate camera
angles, as many as eight streams of audio (Dolby Digital, MPEG-1, MPEG-2,
LPCM, DTS, SDDS), a maximum of 32 subpicture streams (graphic overlay)
as well as navigation menus and other extras. Each of these occupy space
so the amount of material that can be recorded depends upon the number
of features incorporated, the type and degree of audio and video compression
used and the capacity of the disc. For example, a single-sided 4.7 GB
disc holds roughly one hour of straightforward audio and video at maximum
DVD quality and a 1.46 GB disc approximately 18 minutes. At the other end
of the spectrum, the same discs might accommodate as much as nine hours
and three hours respectively of VHS quality material.
Not all computer video and audio encoding systems, authoring software
and consumer electronics (CE) recorders offer access to all DVD-Video
features
or support all degrees of compression. Thus, in practice, different products
offer a range of possible recording times. For example, an entry-level
DVD-Video authoring software package might support only limited features
and permit only one hour of recording (using as little compression as possible)
to keep the quality of the final result as high as possible. Mid-range
and professional hardware and software tools provide the greatest degree
of freedom while consumer products generally offer the least.
Generally speaking, consumer electronics (CE) recorders have a variety
of automatic or manual recording modes typically ranging from one to four
hours (occasionally six to eight hours) per 4.7 GB disc while writable
DVD camcorders usually offer between 20 minutes to one hour per 1.46 GB
disc. Although manufacturers sometimes use language such as High Quality
(HQ), Standard Play (SP), Long Play (LP) and others to describe the recording
time of their products, be aware that there are no broadly accepted industry
standards for the use of such terminology.
CONTINUE TO COPYING DETERRENTS
AND CONTENT PROTECTION
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