Friday, May 25th 2012
ASUS Intros DVD Writer with 50% Lower Power Draw
ASUS announced a new retail and OEM channel DVD writer drive, the DRW-24B5ST. Built in the conventional 5.25-inch SATA form-factor, the drive is said to pack energy-efficient components that reduce idle power draw (mounted disc idling, and no disc idling), by 50%. ASUS branded this feature as E-Green. Armed with 1536 KB of cache, the drive offers DVD access times as low as 160 ms, and CD access times as low as 140 ms. It writes DVDs at speeds as high as 24X depending on the media type, and CDs at speeds as high as 48X. It is priced at 2,500 JPY (US $31).
Source:
Hermitage Akihabara
14 Comments on ASUS Intros DVD Writer with 50% Lower Power Draw
I removed my DVD-RW and replaced it with a sentry MX and mounted a 120mm fan in the spare optical bays underneath it.
I rarely use my optical drive so it wasnt much of a loss by taking it out.
When i do have a need for an optical drive for installing games, watching a DvD or burning files to disc. I have a external slimline optical dvd-rw that i use with my netbook standing by
I couldn't live without my DVD drive, I use it everyday; how do you people burn your "stuff" :D
One thing that ASUS doesn't mention is how much power this drive would draw with normal components. I suspect that the savings is miniscule, and this is just a marketing ploy.
www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=&A=ShowProduct&Q=&sku=828276&is=REG
Seriously, good riddance to CD/DVD/Blu-ray. O.S. installs go onto a USB flash drive. What the hell else do I need a burner for? :slap: ;)
Also last time I check burner took up like 15w.
And seriously, how much power can this drive really save when idle. I doubt enough to ever make up for the price difference...
Also consider the amount of green stuff running in your computer, they all sum up. Imagine switching your cpu from a 95W to a 65W version, your VGA from 100W to one with a 90W power draw, also imagine 3 hard drives, switch them to green drives, save another 15~30 there, you get almost 100W less in the same box.
So at the end, even a 1W saving is a good thing for a PC part, specially if you are considering releasing a product that may sell massively.
This isn't supposed to be a feature for those who don't use a recorder, its meant to replace the non-green recorders. Actually, it makes me comfortable when industry takes this small but big detail, while of course its better to stop using the recorder at all. But in the need of using it, the green option is there.
Its analog to folding@home actually, where participation is more valuable than performance. "Massively" is the key word.