DVD Read and Burn Speed of Superdrive Slow

I've got a new iMac and this is a possible hardware or Bootcamp question. I use DVD Fab on the Windows partition of my new iMac to burn DVDs. This iMac and the other one I own are not very impressive on their read/write speeds. I have this new iMac loaded up with RAM, 3.4 GHz i7, etc. and I'm seeing read/write rates of 3x to 4.5x at best. It only hits the higher speed around 4 or above after it hits it stride about 3-4 minutes into the read or write of the DVD. In other words it starts out very slow 1.2x or so and creeps up to the higher speed only to be done with the project shortly after. So the average read/write rate is much lower. I have a Windows PC that I built about 4 years ago with a dual core AMD chip, 8 GB RAM and a decent 512 MB Nvidia card with a Sony ide optical drive that shames these iMacs using the same DVD Fab software. I can read and burn a DVD in about 50% of the time it takes on either of my iMacs.


Any ideas? I'm guessing that the word Superdrive is an overstatement. Apple still uses and ide optical drive when SATA optical drives have been out for some time. However in the above example all computers were using ide optical drives. Thanks.

iMac, Mac OS X (10.7.1), 27", 3.4 GHz i7, 12GB RAM

Posted on Sep 25, 2011 12:13 PM

Reply
1 reply

Nov 6, 2011 5:26 AM in response to machz990

The term "superdrive" doesn't mean that the drive is "super". Rather, Apple coined the name back in 2002 to differentiate the Mac's that were sold with CD drives as opposed to Mac's that were sold with DVD burners. At the time, DVD burners were expensive and had capabilities that CD drives of the time didn't have. Today, it's just what Apple calls their optical drives. Nothing special about them.


Now, with regards to your observation, what you are seeing is correct. This isn't because of IDE vs SATA. Rather, it's due to the fact that the optical drive of choice is slow. Apple has been known to always use slower drives for heating and cooling purposes. If you want a fast optical drive on an iMac, you'll have to resort to either changing the drive in your iMac or getting a USB drive.

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

DVD Read and Burn Speed of Superdrive Slow

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.