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mmalves

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Everything posted by mmalves

  1. BIN/CUE images usually are in a format that can only be burned to CD media, so if you convert them you might lose data. Use IsoBuster to look at what's inside them and see if you can extract them as user data (2048 bytes/sector) then you might have a chance at putting them on a DVD. Alternatively you could burn the BIN/CUE images as data on a DVD and later mount them to a virtual drive using Daemon Tools or similar program
  2. ImgBurn can't add files to an ISO image, so that part won't work. You can extract the boot info from your bootable CD by going, while in Build mode, to Advanced tab -> Bootable Disc tab -> Extract Boot Image option. All the info you'll need to re-enter to create the bootable DVD will be displayed in ImgBurn's Log. Use Windows Explorer to copy all the CDs' contents to one folder in your hard disk, then add that folder to ImgBurn and click the Calculate button: when ImgBurn asks if that folder is the root of your disc, answer Yes. You can either burn that to DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-RAM media to test it out, or create an ISO image and check its usability with Virtual PC or similar program
  3. Your drive doesn't properly recognize the media, which is a very bad thing! It should be like this: A firmware update could help this, but I couldn't find any. Could you try these blanks discs on another burner to check their Media IDs? Maybe you got the newer Verbatim 8x rated MKM-003-00 blanks and the drive didn't recognize them? That's a laptop burner, right? If I were you, I'd buy a normal-sized burner in an external enclosure and would use it for everything
  4. Try extracting the discs' images with 7-Zip/WinRAR/IsoBuster/UltraISO/PowerISO/MagicISO/etc and recombining their contents on a data DVD, which you can create by using ImgBurn's Build mode (have a look at the Guides section if you're in doubt)
  5. Ask to the person who made it if he/she renamed the image file and if he/she still has the .CUE file (depends on how the disc image was made).
  6. I've used DriveImage XML a few times and it worked fine. I think you'll need to "test drive" it to see if it fits your needs. As for Hiren's BootCD, you can boot your computer from it and backup the main HD to another HD, even if it uses NTFS filesytem or is connected through USB. You can find Hiren's BootCD available for download at mininova.org and thepiratebay.org
  7. The default is SPTI and works best for most people. Unless you can't use SPTI for some reason, you don't need to use any of the other ones If you're having problems burning stuff, please start a new thread describing the problems and posting a recent log from a burn
  8. The problem is your source image: it doesn't have a filesystem, thus Windows can't read it. It does look like to be an Audio CD disc image that was incorrectly made and/or renamed. Have you made it yourself? If so, how did you do it?
  9. To turn that off go to Tools -> Settings -> Write tab and untick 'Lock Volume - Exclusive Access', but be aware that any program can potentially interrupt the burn and give you a nice coaster when that option is off By the way, BSODs may happen when drivers aren't playing nice with each other so you might want to check if you're using the latest storage drivers for your motherboard
  10. When you load the ISO image in Write mode, ImgBurn will show information about that image in the Source section. Make sure you have Test Mode unticked, as Test Mode doesn't burn anything to disc. Please post a log from one of those burns (you can find it at Help -> ImgBurn Logs).
  11. ImgBurn can't do that directly (don't know why the editor thought of ImgBurn for that). The only freeware that I know that allows imaging hard disks is Runtime's DriveImage XML. Paid ones could be Acronis True Image, Norton Ghost, etc. Have a look at Hiren's BootCD and it might have what you want
  12. http://www.dvdflick.net/
  13. Install the latest ImgBurn and, when asked if you want to keep your settings, asnwer No (all the settings will be reset to their default values). Now try burning a DVD-R with Test Mode enabled and see if it still locks up.
  14. You don't need to create an ISO image before burning it to a disc: follow this guide and you'll burn the files directly to the disc
  15. Add the 2 AVIs to DVD Flick and set its target size to dual-layer DVD (8000 MB aprox), but don't save it as an ISO or burn directly: follow this guide to burn the VIDEO_TS folder generated by DVD Flick
  16. May I ask why are you using Windows 98? I mean, if the computer is old and has limited resources, it should be able to run Windows 2000, which is a solid OS and much more stable and usable
  17. Please post the full log from that burn (you can find it at Help-> ImgBurn Logs), as the log contains important information that allows us to help you
  18. Please post the log from the recent burn
  19. As ImgBurn is just a burning tool, it doesn't modify anything. Use VLC Media Player to play the image file generated by ImgBurn and you'll see how your DVD would play on a standalone DVD player, although if the image doesn't fit on a DVD+R DL disc you won't be able to burn it
  20. That media is very low quality, and that's why some discs work and others don't. It's not related to the UDF filesystem at all. Try burning one at 4x (maybe 6x/8x) and it might work, but I wouldn't trust that media with any data I couldn't lose. For reliable media use Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden blanks
  21. On Windows 95/98/ME ImgBurn (and most other burning programs) needs ASPI installed in order to work. You can find ASPI for download at the bottom of ImgBurn's download page
  22. Check with the manufacturer of your laptop if there's a newer firmware for your burner. It seems the media you're trying to use isn't supported by your burner. Try with Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden blanks and it should work OK, especially the ones rated for 8x burning speed
  23. Since that's related to the conversion part, I think you'll get a better answer at DVD Flick's forum DVD Flick uses ImgBurn to create the ISO image and/or burn the project to disc, and that's the part we can be most helpful at
  24. The layer break is when the reader drive has to switch reading from layer 0 to layer 1, and this usually takes less than a fifth of a second. When you build with ImgBurn you're shown the possible layer breaks found according to the content you want to burn: you should choose one where a small pause is less noticeable (fade-in/fade-out/scene change/etc). The only way to not have a layer break is by using single-layer media, which also limits the amount of video/quality/data you can use. As for the screen going black, check your source video and/or the encoding settings, as this is not a problem that ImgBurn would create. It could also be related to poor quality media (Verbatim DVD+R DL 2.4x MKM-001-00 Made in Singapore blanks are the only ones that work as they should).
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