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Everything posted by ianymaty
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At the bottom you will find all you need http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=5555
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You need to convert that avi to a compliant DVD Video Structure. (VIDEO_TS folder with .vob, .ifo, .bup files inside) You can use DVD Flick, DVD Styler (free) or ConvertXtoDVD, than burn the result with ImgBurn like in the guide you mention.
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failure to burn cd CUE file created with Imgburn
ianymaty replied to blahblahblah2357's topic in ImgBurn Support
Oh!, Wrong assumption from me. Thanks LUK! for correction -
failure to burn cd CUE file created with Imgburn
ianymaty replied to blahblahblah2357's topic in ImgBurn Support
When you make a cue, insert a disc in the drive otherwise it will calculate to the next available standard media size. 1x is not an option in your drive/firmware/media combination. 16x should be OK. Update drive firmware http://www.firmwarehq.com/Lite-On/iHAS124%2BY/files.html -
Extract the VIDEO_TS folder from the zip and follow this Guide http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=4632 As a side note VLC can play from a archive that's whay it played it. Also update ImgBurn
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Does the source file play nice from the hard disk with a software player? As I see on Support site there is an Upgrade file for the player posted on 27 Dec. 2010 that states: - Improve specific disc''s playback capability You should install it http://www.samsung.com/us/support/owners/product/BD-C6500
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You are skipping this from the Guide for Windows Vista/7: Point the 'Boot Image' to the 'etfsboot.com' file within the 'boot' folder in your source folder - i.e. "T:\VISTA_INSTALL\boot\etfsboot.com"
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Followed Guides, Dvd not reading correctly
ianymaty replied to outtawack311's topic in ImgBurn Support
Good to hear that you sorted out. Please tell us what it was, to help other users find in the same situation to know what not to do. -
You need to look at the final file/s after convertion before burning. Play it with a software player. ImgBurn will not alter the files in any way, it burns them "äs is".
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It will not help but it will confirm that the disc is readable, at least in the drive that burned it. If you have that confirmation, than you need to look elsewhere. i.e. Playability of the source file/s or player reading compatibility with that media.
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2x is not an option in your current drive/firmware/media combination. Try all the speeds available. Leave out 2.4x since it was already used and try the others.
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What actualy file is that? Is it an image file of a operating sistem or a regular .exe? Here are the guides for Windows XP http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=11190 and Windows Vista / 7 http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=11194
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In Process Explorer search for CDROM PS: It's called Roman surface by the way... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_surface
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The AD-722x series from Optiarc is comming in both SATA and PATA versions and is one of the recommended drives to burn Dual Layer DVD discs http://www.sonynec-optiarc.com/products/hhid_dvdrw/ad7220.html
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Now, you have to try with all available speeds to see if one of them will produce a readable disc, leave the verify enabled. A lens cleaning disc might help too. If you have no valid reason, you shoud consider update Vista to SP2.
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Something (software installed and running) is keeping your drive locked. Unless you have a valid reason, update XP to SP3 Try a lower speed instead of MAX Probably this firmware is newer, see if it lets you update http://www.firmwarehq.com/Lite-On/SHW-160P6S/files.html Remove any disc from the drive before procede to update.
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You won't see anything in Windows Explorer. Is not a file system that Windows recognise. Verify your burns always.
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Look in Help menu for old logs
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How to write a Blu-ray Video disc using ImgBurn http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=9512
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Post the full log, don't cut out what's important
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Writing at 2.4x is an old story back when there wasn't a big support for buffer underruns and is not actual anymore this days. As I said, you need a good quality burn, the console or any other player don't know at wich speed was burn a particular disc. It just plays it or not. You have to find out by trial and error what speed produces a good reliable or the best burn in your drive/firmware/media combination. Not always but sometimes the hard disk activity can render in some timeouts that some drive's firmware can't handle well. In youre case was just a warning.
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Try a lower speed instead of MAX
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Try the other speeds too, 2.4x is not even an option in your drive/firmware/media combination, so you left with 6x and 8x. Don't tell us that you have to burn them at exactly at 2.4x. All you need is a good quality burn at whatever speed your combination can produce it. Your hard disk is having trouble feeding the drive with data. Do you used it for other tasks while burning?
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Can you replicate it and tell us which route you used? I tryed to drop a few files from one directory in which exist a windows.ini file from Total Commander, Windows Explorer and via Browse for a file and save as iso for test. None of them contain the ini file. Maybe you mistakenly droped that file too. How many file says the final disc info before click OK to burn? Give us the log for that session. Look in Help menu to locate it.
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You probably selected the files with Ctrl+A not one by one Ctrl+click. In Options tab untick Include Hidden Files and Include System Files.