DVDRW Samsung SH-202H idle power consumption findings
Moderators: Ralf Hutter, Lawrence Lee
DVDRW Samsung SH-202H idle power consumption findings
My Philips DVDR1660P died (problem recognizing disks), and i replaced with a Samsung SH-202H .
I was curious about power consumption at idle, and using a multimeter obtained these results:
Philips DVDR1660P : on 5V 0.46A ; on 12V 0.7mA
Samsung SH-202H : on 5V 0.8mA ; on 12V 0.2mA
So the Philips consume 2.3W and Samsung 0.0064W , it's a very big difference.
Some time ago i have a Ricoh MP5240A and a Toshiba DVD (don't know the model, player only, reading at 16X), and i remember the power consumption was between 1W and 2W.
Don't know about power consumption at idle of newer model from other manufacturers, but seems that Samsung is one step ahead.
BTW, on the label of the drive say Toshiba-Samsung
I was curious about power consumption at idle, and using a multimeter obtained these results:
Philips DVDR1660P : on 5V 0.46A ; on 12V 0.7mA
Samsung SH-202H : on 5V 0.8mA ; on 12V 0.2mA
So the Philips consume 2.3W and Samsung 0.0064W , it's a very big difference.
Some time ago i have a Ricoh MP5240A and a Toshiba DVD (don't know the model, player only, reading at 16X), and i remember the power consumption was between 1W and 2W.
Don't know about power consumption at idle of newer model from other manufacturers, but seems that Samsung is one step ahead.
BTW, on the label of the drive say Toshiba-Samsung
5V * 0.46A = 2.3w
12V * 0.007A = 0.08w
Total = ~2.4w
5V * 0.008A = 0.04w
12V * 0.002A = 0.024w
Total = ~0.06w
He's only off by a factor of 10 with the Samsung measurement, but either way, it's significantly better than the Philips drive, power draw is just about negligible.
Edit: These numbers are wrong, too!
12V * 0.007A = 0.08w
Total = ~2.4w
5V * 0.008A = 0.04w
12V * 0.002A = 0.024w
Total = ~0.06w
He's only off by a factor of 10 with the Samsung measurement, but either way, it's significantly better than the Philips drive, power draw is just about negligible.
Edit: These numbers are wrong, too!
Last edited by drees on Tue Feb 19, 2008 10:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
So you think his measurements should be this?jhhoffma wrote:Actually, he's off by a factor of 100 for three of those measurements from what I can see. The .46A is the only one that makes sense to me.
Philips DVDR1660P : on 5V 0.46A ; on 12V 0.07A
Samsung SH-202H : on 5V 0.08A ; on 12V 0.02A
I actually converted his numbers incorrectly previously, I'm off by a factor of 10, hah!
I was mistaken thinking that this was total power draw, not idle. This is what the results should be for a modern drive (result of a whitepaper by Intel).
From this you can see that idle power is pretty much zero, and continuous read draw is around 2.5W.
Regarding the .46A, what I meant was why is this one in amps and the rest are milliamps?
From this you can see that idle power is pretty much zero, and continuous read draw is around 2.5W.
Regarding the .46A, what I meant was why is this one in amps and the rest are milliamps?
Sooooory, i made a mistake, for 5V measurement for Samsung i forgot to change the connection for proper scale on multimeter.
200mA and 20A scale have different connection on multimeter.
The value for 5V on Samsung drive is 83.8mA
I remeasure the consumption and obtain approx. the same values for other measurements.
Philips on 5v:
Philips on 12V:
Samsung on 12V:
So, the difference is not so big, but it is 1,937W
I think the whitepaper from Intel contains values from a laptop drive, after a few spin-up with Samsung drive i measure a maximum of 1.06A on 12V line, but i considered the measurement invalid because the multimeter is not able to measure a peak value, a few second of constant drain is required for proper measurement.
200mA and 20A scale have different connection on multimeter.
The value for 5V on Samsung drive is 83.8mA
I remeasure the consumption and obtain approx. the same values for other measurements.
Philips on 5v:
Philips on 12V:
Samsung on 12V:
So, the difference is not so big, but it is 1,937W
I think the whitepaper from Intel contains values from a laptop drive, after a few spin-up with Samsung drive i measure a maximum of 1.06A on 12V line, but i considered the measurement invalid because the multimeter is not able to measure a peak value, a few second of constant drain is required for proper measurement.
You would be correct, but the values would still be in the same ballpark, but maybe a bit higher.Shemale wrote:I think the whitepaper from Intel contains values from a laptop drive, after a few spin-up with Samsung drive i measure a maximum of 1.06A on 12V line, but i considered the measurement invalid because the multimeter is not able to measure a peak value, a few second of constant drain is required for proper measurement.