Differences
Between CD DVD Media
Even though both CD and DVD disks
have the same
media size and shape, the things they have in
common ends there. There are many different
things
between the two, such as what they hold
and how much they
hold.
Data pits and lasers
A disc has
microscopic grooves that will move
along in a spiral around the
disc. CDs and
DVDs both have these grooves, with laser
breams
applied to scan these very grooves.
As you may know, digital information
is represented
in ones and zeroes. Inside of these discs,
very
tiny reflective bumps known as lands and non
reflective
holes known as pits, which can be
found beside the grooves,
reflect both the ones
and the zeroes of digital
information.
By reducing the wave length of the
laser to 625mm
or more infrared light, DVD technology has
managed to write in smaller pits when compared
to the
standard technology of CD. This will
allow for a greater
amount of data per track
on the DVD. The minimum length
allowed for a
pit in a single layer DVD-R is .4 micron,
which
is obviously more than the .0834 micron that a
CD
offers.
The tracks of a DVD are narrower as
well, which
allows for more tracks per disc, which
also
translates into more capacity than a CD.
The
avaerage single layer DVD holds 4.5 GB of data,
while a
CD holds a mere 700 MB.
Layers
As stated above, a DVD has
smaller pits and the
lasers need to focus on them. This
is actually
achieved by using a thinner plastic
substrate
than in a CD, which means that the laser needs
to
pass through a thinner layer, with less
depth to reach the
pits. It's this reduction in
thickness that's responsible
for the discs
that were only 0.6mm thickness - which is
half
that of a CD.
Data access speed
DVDs will
access data at a much faster rate than
a CD can. The
average 32X CD-ROM drive reads
data at 4MB a second, while a 1X
DVD drive reads
at 1.38MB a second. This is even faster
than
an 8X CD drive.
Universal data format
The
recording formats of CDs and DVDs are quite
different, as DVDs
use UDF, or the Universal
Data Format. This format allows
data, video,
audio, or even a combination of all three to
be
stored in a single file structure. The
advantage to this
is any file can be accessed
by any drive, computer, or even
consumer video.
CDs on the other hand aren't compatible
with
this format.