I am not familiar with the one you mention, but I think it will work.
It's just a matter of finding out which tracks to play to get to the same functions.
Often the test CD's come in sets of two.
One is ABSOLUTELY faultless (no standard CD's ever are), leaving the error-correction circuits job-less. This one is what you need to adjust the player.
The other one has built-in faults, simulating fingerprints, smudges, scratches etc., escalating in degree as it plays to see how well things work. You can actually see the faults in the CD surface.
Most are made so that no CD player will play all the way through without audible - or tracking faults. This one is for final test of the result and can't be used for adjusting, only to check how good the player reads and corrects faults.
I'm sure that the one, you mention called 5A is half of a pair, the other one being 5B.
You can buy test CD's with phase, left/right etc. cheaply but they really are no good for adjusting the player. You need a pro. test CD's with absolutely no faults and it would be nice to also have one with the above mentioned factory-made faults. They are usually quite expensive because of the way they are made and the fairly limited numbers. I think mine were in the 300 £ range for a set.
Martin