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  1. New IMG Burn user. Seems perfect for what I need. But I'm missing something. Have a 1-hour MP4 file. I have used ImgBurn Build to create the ISO and mds. Then used ImgBurn Write to write the ISO to a DVD. So far so good. The DVD burn appears to work. But after the verify finishes, I look at the contents of the DVD and the only thing there is the original MP4 file. What am I missing for making this a mastered DVD, for auto-playing on a DVD player?
  2. dbminter

    ingburn

    The problem is I don't know what a Karaoke BIN or CDG file is. If you're just trying to create a standard Audio CD disc, then ImgBurn can make those with MP3 files. But, if a Karaoke disc has like video associated with where you can sing along, then, I don't think ImgBurn can create one of those natively.
  3. I have ingburn setup on mu PC desktop. Please read carefully. 1. I go to YouTube and copy the URL with YouTube to Mp3 Converter.html 2.When that's done I send it to my desktop as a MP3 File. 3. What option to I choose? 3. What I want to do is create a Karaoke Bin file or a CDG file so I can burn it with Power CD+G Burner and have a karaoke file. Witch I play and sing to. 4. Could you Please Please write out the steps from going to YouTube to the finish. 5. Will this program do that for me? Can you remote me some who PLEASE 6. TYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY RAY ASAP
  4. I have ingburn setup on mu PC desktop. Please read carefully. 1. I go to YouTube and copy the URL with YouTube to Mp3 Converter.html 2.When that's done I send it to my desktop as a MP3 File. 3. What option to I choose? 3. What I want to do is create a Karaoke Bin file or a CDG file so I can burn it with Power CD+G Burner and have a karaoke file. Witch I play and sing to. 4. Could you Please Please write out the steps from going to YouTube to the finish. 5. Will this program do that for me? Can you remote me some who PLEASE 6. TYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY RAY ASAP
  5. dbminter

    ingburn

    Depends on what you mean by a "karaoke bin file." Do you mean can it make a BIN file from an existing karaoke CD or DVD? If it's a CD, ImgBurn can make a BIN file from an existing CD. If it's a DVD file, then it will most likely create an ISO as opposed to a BIN file. If you're asking can ImgBurn create a karaoke CD, if it's an Audio CD format, ImgBurn can write an Audio CD file from existing containers, but it cannot create a BIN file from them. If a karaoke CD is not a standard Audio CD file format, then, no ImgBurn cannot create a karaoke CD.
  6. Raymond LaBerge

    ingburn

    Will this program create a karaoke bin file?
  7. I'm using DVD Flick to convert video MP4 files for use on a DVD player and it automatically starts ImgBurn to create the DVD. I'm using Win10 and all software is current and up to date. Some work correctly, some of the videos are squashed on both side and elongated, they don't fill the screen. I don't know if it's a DVD Flick or ImgBurn problem and what to change. I don't think I've changed any settings on either program. Does anyone know why some DVDs have the correct, full screen display and others don't? I'd provide the log but don't know where it is...
  8. @James352 I'm not sure what you really want to achieve but from what I conclude from your description is that you want to automate the install of a bunch of programs launching a single file. You can create a .cmd or .bat file and point to each program you need to install. Put that file in the same folder with the .exe or .msi you have and just execute the file you created. To be seamless/unattended you need to know the silent switch commands to all the programs you put in chain. You can also do copy files to certain location or import .reg settings you need. You can learn more here http://unattended.sourceforge.net/installers.php Here is my silent install of ImgBurn .cmd file. Open it with Notepad or any text editor to see the structure. The first part is to get the admin privileges that you can start to install any program. I modified it to add some more programs (Adobe Reader DC and WinRAR) to the list before the exit line, like so, you can add more. Don't use spaces in the path or you need put them between quote marks like "Path to the program.exe" Install ImgBurn_x64.cmd @dbminter @LUK! You should give a look at Ventoy https://www.ventoy.net/en/index.html
  9. I hadn't thought of using anything like YUMI or Rufus to put Acronis rescue media ISO's on flash drive. I no longer use the application, but I have several 10 to 20 year old backup sets still in my possession. Acronis does release latest updated rescue media ISO's on Softexia, but you can't edit those ISO's to inject files into. So, I can't put Acronis backup sets on DVD's with the rescue media ISO. But, I could burn the ISO to flash drive and have that drive's free space. Does YUMI use all available space when writing an ISO to flash drive? The drawback I found to Rufus for burning ISO's to flash drive is if the ISO is 1 GB and the flash drive is 16 GB, the resulting ISO burned to flash drive leaves you with a 1 GB flash drive and 15 GB of unallocated space. I could, I suppose, create a 2nd partition on the flash drive with the remaining 15 GB of space, but I'd prefer a situation like when Macrium Reflect creates Rescue Media on flash drives. As long as Reflect doesn't have to format the flash drive, it will leave all extra space available on the single Rescue Media partition. If it has to format the flash drive, it creates a 1 GB bootable flash drive and the remaining 15 GB is unallocated, requiring creating a 2nd partition on the flash drive. I'd like to avoid having to create a 2nd partition.
  10. hi everyone. I did some research and I'm not able to figure out the following: I have about 10 programs I regularly install onto machines for people. I am trying to mount an ISO containing multiple programs, but I dont think there is logic to allow multiple programs to boot when mounting an ISO. for clarity, I am trying to create an image on a drive that contains say.... 10 programs. The goal would be for all 10 programs to install when mounting the file. It doesnt seem possible as each program needs to finish installing before the next one can begin. any thoughts or experience with this? Maybe I need to look more into cloning the C: drive onto a virtual drive vs. taking the ISO route?
  11. I'm creating multiple ISO files which contains only a folder, is there a way for Imgburn to automatically create the output files in the source directory? I have to manually change the output path every time I create a new image file. Is there anything like {source}/imagei.iso or %source%/image.iso placeholders? thanks.
  12. I've been trying to figure this out throughout the day, as seen in the imgburn log. I was finally able to create a Bios bootable .iso file by copying and pasting a etfsboot.com file from previous builds. I am, however, very curious what I was missing here for UEFI if anyone is able to help. Boring, sob story about my research: (without etfsboot.com) I used these settings: Emulation: None Boot Image: (bootmgr, bootmgr.efi, boot.sdi, boot.sdi/$boot, etc.) Platform ID: UEFI Developer: Microsoft Load Segment: 07C0 Sectors to Load: (The 'boot Image' file size in bytes / 512 and round up) -OR- (I'd see that a tool says that the first file inside of: ./EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi is offset by 1024 bytes so I'd put 2) I also clicked '1999' in the 'ISO9660 restrictions' as lightning UK suggested in another post and after about half a dozen .iso files later, I changed to the 'UDF' file system only. Everything else should be default settings. I installed imgburn on this computer for this 1 project to make use of the ramdisk to save on ssd wear lol. Thank you for reading. The custom windows 10 install files that I have that are made via Microsoft Deployment toolkit, I believe. (I took out all of the locale directories for readability). --- Root Directory: user@comp:/mnt/win/W10_604.Build$ tree -s -L 1 . ├── [ 128] autorun.inf ├── [ 0] Boot ├── [ 408074] bootmgr ├── [ 1452856] bootmgr.efi ├── [ 0] Deploy └── [ 0] EFI 3 directories, 3 files --- Boot/ Directory user@comp:/mnt/win/W10_604.Build$ tree -I '*.exe.mui|*.ttf' Boot/ Boot/ ├── BCD ├── bcd.LOG ├── bootfix.bin ├── boot.sdi ├── memtest.exe └── Resources └── bootres.dll 37 directories, 8 files --- EFI/ user@comp:/mnt/win/W10_604.Build$ tree -I '*mui|*.ttf' EFI/ EFI/ ├── Boot │ ├── bootx64.efi │ └── en-us └── Microsoft └── Boot ├── BCD ├── bcd.LOG ├── memtest.efi └── Resources └── bootres.dll 28 directories, 7 files --- Deploy/Boot/ Directory: user@comp:/mnt/win/W10_604.Build$ tree -P 'boot*|BCD' -I '*mui' Deploy/Boot/ Deploy/Boot/ ├── x64 │ ├── Boot │ │ ├── BCD │ │ ├── bootfix.bin │ │ ├── boot.sdi │ │ └── Resources │ │ └── bootres.dll │ ├── bootmgr │ ├── bootmgr.efi │ └── EFI │ ├── Boot │ │ ├── bootx64.efi │ │ └── en-us │ └── Microsoft │ └── Boot │ ├── BCD │ └── Resources │ └── bootres.dll └── x86 ├── Boot │ ├── BCD │ ├── bg-bg │ ├── bootfix.bin │ ├── boot.sdi │ └── Resources │ └── bootres.dll ├── bootmgr ├── bootmgr.efi └── EFI ├── Boot │ └── bootia32.efi └── Microsoft └── Boot ├── BCD └── Resources └── bootres.dll 136 directories, 18 files Log, all from today.
  13. There is really only one option to choose from when it comes to double layer DVD. That is Verbatim DataLife Plus/AZO. NOT the Life Series you find in brick and mortar stores, which is CMC, the WORST you can get. You can only find the good Verbatim in online stores. However, I have had good results with TDK DVD+R DL in the past. They complete burns and Verifies and were still readable years later. If you're just considering backing up these DVD's after making video files for watching on a video server, you might want to forgo using DVD+R DL for your backups. They use organic dyes and will die faster. BD-R uses metallic oxides which will last much longer. Of course, if you want to watch these discs, you'll need to burn them to DVD+R DL for viewing in a standard DVD player. But, if you just have a collection of MP4 files or MKV, you could consider just making an ISO in ImgBurn of those video files and burn that to BD-R. Or you could create image files of the DVD's and copy those to a BD-R. A BD-R will hold 3 DVD-9's. (Unless they're all nearly full on disc, which means you'll only get 2.)
  14. I have an ISO and I am trying to create a bootable CDE or DVD form the ISO file as input with IMGBURN. I created the ISO from a Bootable CD-RW. I must be doing something wrong. Can someone help point me in the right direction or what I am doing wrong?
  15. If you're trying to create a bootable USB, as I said, ImgBurn won't do that.
  16. I am guessing you're wanting to use ImgBurn to create a bootable ISO from or to a USB flash drive? If so, you can't do that with ImgBurn. ImgBurn only reads/writes to optical discs for images.
  17. greatings and regards. please explain how to create an iso bootable file from a multi-boot USB. thanks The size of my USB multi boot is 14 GB. And I made this with the yumi program
  18. Well after several hours trying to get 'cdfs' to start plus trying to find something(!) in Windows to repair and make the drives behave, I have more or less given up at least for now. In typical Windows behaviour, when I try to create a Service using 'cdfs.sys' it tells me that it already exists. If I try to start it it tells me that the Service doesn't exist. I have found a way to get UFD format ISO files onto the main PC using the laptop so at least XPlane is ok now. Will probably resume trying the beat Windows into submission in a little while. But thanks for your help and suggestions. PS Imgburn log does show that it Initialises SPTI and finds all the drives.
  19. I can't see Microsoft dropping support for ISO9660. It would pretty much kill backwards compatibility. Plus, older install discs may be ISO9660 and not UDF. I decided to create an ISO9660 image and burn it to a test DVD+RW to see if my Windows 10 2004 build can read it. I burned it and was able to load a .LOG file and read it fine from the ISO9660 disc I created from an image I wrote in ImgBurn. So, it's not that Microsoft removed ISO9660 backwards compatibility in Windows 10 2004.
  20. I had ImgBurn on my XP desk top back in 2010. I used it to burn files on to a double density CD that were important family files such as photo/video ( s ). Here we are in 2020 and the XP computer I used has had hard drive disk problems causing the loss of the very files that were burned on the dd CD as mentioned above. We now have a very nice all in one windows 10 system and would like to recover the files burned by ImgBurn on the dd CD. The old XP computer still operates and still has the CD disk originally used to create the dd CD, but ImgBurn no longer exists on it and the old computer is currently not connected to the internet. The other issue is that our new Windows 10 computer does not have a CD drive, although a USB CD drive could be connected to it if need be. What would be your suggestion in this case? If I put the current version of ImgBurn on my new Windows 10 system, which is connected to the internet and purchase a USB CD drive, would ImgBurn be able to detect and read the dd CD created in 2010, thereby giving me access to my lost files? The other option I see is to reconnect the old XP system to the internet, reinstall ImgBurn, and then use the CD drive on the XP system to read the dd CD disk it created in 2010. I apologize for this lengthy post, but any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated by our family. Thanks for your patience, GeorgeN
  21. Thanks for the responses. I was hoping to find out in detail how Imgburn is able to read the DVD and its contents whilst Windows 10 doesn't in the hope that I can find a way to make Windows 10 also read the DVD. Even using Imgburn to create an ISO file of the DVD its contents still cannot be seen or file mounted from Windows Explorer. I am guessing that Imgburn must use different drivers. I have checked and found that the main PC where the DVD contents cannot be read is 64 bit Windows 10 version 2004 from 26/6/20 ie more or less upto date. The laptop we have is on 64 bit Windows 10 version 1909 from 5/8/19 (so a year out of date!) but it can read the DVD contents, mount the ISO version of it, etc as it should. And after more investigation I believe that I might have identified that the root cause is that those DVDs that cannot be read on the main PC are in ISO9660 format and not in the more modern UDF which can be read. So it looks like MS stopped supporting the ISO9660 format in the last year which fits with having read that MS is tending to no longer support optical drives because they are old hat apparently! Anyway short of being able to get the latest versions of Windows 10 to 'see' the ISO9660 DVDs with different drivers and/or settings, I am hoping to be able to find some software that will be able to create an ISO file in UDF format from the ISO9660 DVD ie a sort of file conversion. I hope that the ISO can be mounted, etc.
  22. My Windows 10-based 64-bit system has a built-in TSSTcorp SH-S203P DVD read/write SCSI unit plus a USB connected standalone Freecom 20J6 DVD read/write unit (plus various disks, etc). It is several months since I last used either unit but both had been working fine; I used them to create Windows repair disks, iso copies, file backups, etc using Imgburn 2.5.8.0. However I now find that I can no longer read 'product' DVDs that have third party software on them (eg Aerosoft, Microsoft, etc) even though in the past I could. But both devices can still read any CD or any 'non Product' DVD that I have created for storing files, etc. In order to be sure that the 'product' DVDs were not at fault, I do have a 64-bit Windows 10 laptop and it reads the disks with no problems.The only obvious difference would appear to be that the version of driver 'cdrom.sys' on the laptop is 10.0.18362.1 whilst it is 10.0.19041.1 but both with the same date of 21/6/2006. I believe that it is a system rather than hardware problem. I have not made any changes to Windows settings (that I am aware of) that would obviously affect the functioning of both drives. What finally 'did it' for me was that just for the hell of it I thought I would use Imgburn to try to read a 'product' DVD - it worked perfectly and Imgburn 'sees' the DVD just as it should. But unfortunately Windows itself still cannot!! I would have assumed that Imgburn would use the 'standard' Windows drivers and so I expected that it also would be unable to read the 'product' DVDs. But clearly not. I would really appreciate any ideas as to where I might look in Windows to try to resolve this because just now I am completely stumped and I really do need to be able to read the 'product' DVDs. Thank you.
  23. When I try this (using read mode), I get the message shown below. I'm trying to copy a DVD that has 2 videos on it, so read mode does not work. When I try using Build mode, I don't have enough information -- I don't know how to use Build mode to create an iso. I've tried to figure it out, but I'm not smart enough. All I get is a bunch of files, not an iso file. I need to know how to create the iso file in Build mode. (I think.)
  24. if you're just trying to make a direct copy, just use read mode to create an iso on your hard disk, then when it's finished copying, choose write mode and write the iso you made try this
  25. I am trying to create an image of a PS2 game however when I reach 99% it says "no seek complete" or "track following error". I am brand new to this so any help is much appreciated. log no seek complete I 12:27:37 ImgBurn Version 2.5.8.0 started! I 12:27:37 Microsoft Windows 8 Core x64 Edition (6.2, Build 9200) I 12:27:37 Total Physical Memory: 3,631,368 KiB - Available: 1,144,436 KiB I 12:27:37 Initialising SPTI... I 12:27:37 Searching for SCSI / ATAPI devices... I 12:27:38 -> Drive 1 - Info: hp DVD RAM UJ8C2 1.00 (E:) (SATA) I 12:27:38 Found 1 DVD±RW/RAM! I 12:28:44 Operation Started! I 12:28:44 Source Device: [0:0:0] hp DVD RAM UJ8C2 1.00 (E:) (SATA) I 12:28:44 Source Media Type: DVD-ROM (Book Type: DVD-ROM) I 12:28:44 Source Media Supported Read Speeds: 2.5x, 4x, 8x I 12:28:44 Source Media Sectors: 2,294,320 (Track Path: PTP) I 12:28:44 Source Media Size: 4,698,767,360 bytes I 12:28:44 Source Media Volume Set Identifier: <>:7=113SCEI I 12:28:45 Source Media Application Identifier: PLAYSTATION I 12:28:45 Source Media Implementation Identifier: DVD-ROM GENERATOR I 12:28:45 Source Media File System(s): ISO9660, UDF (1.02) I 12:28:45 Read Speed (Data/Audio): MAX / 8x I 12:28:45 Destination File: F:\Image.iso I 12:28:45 Destination Free Space: 4,899,130,540,032 Bytes (4,784,307,168.00 KiB) (4,672,174.97 MiB) (4,562.67 GiB) I 12:28:45 Destination File System: NTFS I 12:28:45 File Splitting: Auto I 12:28:46 Read Speed - Effective: 3.3x - 8x I 12:28:53 Reading Session 1 of 1... (1 Track, LBA: 0 - 2294319) I 12:28:53 Reading Track 1 of 1... (MODE1/2048, LBA: 0 - 2294319) W 12:38:47 Failed to Read Sectors 2275712 - 2275743 - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:38:55 Failed to Read Sector 2275712 - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:38:55 Sector 2275712 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 12:38:55 Retrying (1 of 20)... W 12:39:02 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:02 Retrying (2 of 20)... W 12:39:09 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:09 Retrying (3 of 20)... W 12:39:16 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:16 Retrying (4 of 20)... W 12:39:23 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:23 Retrying (5 of 20)... W 12:39:30 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:31 Retrying (6 of 20)... W 12:39:37 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:38 Retrying (7 of 20)... W 12:39:45 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:45 Retrying (8 of 20)... W 12:39:52 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:52 Retrying (9 of 20)... W 12:39:59 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:39:59 Retrying (10 of 20)... W 12:40:06 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:06 Retrying (11 of 20)... W 12:40:13 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:14 Retrying (12 of 20)... W 12:40:20 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:21 Retrying (13 of 20)... W 12:40:27 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:28 Retrying (14 of 20)... W 12:40:35 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:35 Retrying (15 of 20)... W 12:40:42 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:42 Retrying (16 of 20)... W 12:40:49 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:49 Retrying (17 of 20)... W 12:40:56 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:40:56 Retrying (18 of 20)... W 12:41:03 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:41:03 Retrying (19 of 20)... W 12:41:10 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:41:11 Retrying (20 of 20)... W 12:41:17 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:41:30 Retrying (21)... W 12:41:37 Retry Failed - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:43:29 Failed to Read Sector 2275712 - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:43:29 Sector 2275712 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 12:43:38 Failed to Read Sector 2275713 - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:43:38 Sector 2275713 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 12:43:38 Retrying (1 of 20)... W 12:43:41 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:43:41 Retrying (2 of 20)... W 12:43:44 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error W 12:43:44 Retrying (3 of 20)... W 12:43:47 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:43:48 Retrying (4 of 20)... W 12:43:51 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error W 12:43:51 Retrying (5 of 20)... W 12:43:54 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error W 12:43:54 Retrying (6 of 20)... W 12:43:57 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error W 12:43:57 Retrying (7 of 20)... W 12:44:00 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error W 12:44:01 Retrying (8 of 20)... I 12:44:02 Abort Request Acknowledged W 12:44:03 Retry Failed - Reason: Unrecovered Read Error E 12:44:04 Failed to Read Sector 2275713 - Reason: No Seek Complete E 12:44:04 Sector 2275713 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd E 12:44:08 Failed to Read Sectors! I 12:44:09 Exporting Graph Data... I 12:44:09 Graph Data File: C:\Users\O\AppData\Roaming\ImgBurn\Graph Data Files\hp_DVD_RAM_UJ8C2_1.00_SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER-5-2020_12-28_PM_N-A.ibg I 12:44:09 Export Successfully Completed! E 12:44:09 Operation Aborted! - Duration: 00:15:23 E 12:44:09 Average Read Rate: 4,931 KiB/s (3.6x) - Maximum Read Rate: 11,072 KiB/s (8.2x) log for track following error I 12:46:36 Operation Started! I 12:46:36 Source Device: [0:0:0] hp DVD RAM UJ8C2 1.00 (E:) (SATA) I 12:46:36 Source Media Type: DVD-ROM (Book Type: DVD-ROM) I 12:46:36 Source Media Supported Read Speeds: 2.5x, 4x, 8x I 12:46:36 Source Media Sectors: 2,294,320 (Track Path: PTP) I 12:46:36 Source Media Size: 4,698,767,360 bytes I 12:46:36 Source Media Volume Set Identifier: <>:7=113SCEI I 12:46:36 Source Media Application Identifier: PLAYSTATION I 12:46:36 Source Media Implementation Identifier: DVD-ROM GENERATOR I 12:46:36 Source Media File System(s): ISO9660, UDF (1.02) I 12:46:36 Read Speed (Data/Audio): MAX / 8x I 12:46:36 Destination File: F:\Image.iso I 12:46:36 Destination Free Space: 4,899,130,540,032 Bytes (4,784,307,168.00 KiB) (4,672,174.97 MiB) (4,562.67 GiB) I 12:46:36 Destination File System: NTFS I 12:46:36 File Splitting: Auto I 12:46:37 Read Speed - Effective: 3.3x - 8x I 12:46:40 Reading Session 1 of 1... (1 Track, LBA: 0 - 2294319) I 12:46:40 Reading Track 1 of 1... (MODE1/2048, LBA: 0 - 2294319) I 12:47:26 Abort Request Acknowledged E 12:47:26 Failed to Read Sectors! I 12:47:27 Exporting Graph Data... I 12:47:27 Graph Data File: C:\Users\O\AppData\Roaming\ImgBurn\Graph Data Files\hp_DVD_RAM_UJ8C2_1.00_SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER-5-2020_12-46_PM_N-A.ibg I 12:47:27 Export Successfully Completed! E 12:47:28 Operation Aborted! - Duration: 00:00:50 E 12:47:28 Average Read Rate: 1,324 KiB/s (1.0x) - Maximum Read Rate: 1,491 KiB/s (1.1x) I 12:48:08 Operation Started! I 12:48:08 Source Device: [0:0:0] hp DVD RAM UJ8C2 1.00 (E:) (SATA) I 12:48:08 Source Media Type: DVD-ROM (Book Type: DVD-ROM) I 12:48:08 Source Media Supported Read Speeds: 2.5x, 4x, 8x I 12:48:08 Source Media Sectors: 2,294,320 (Track Path: PTP) I 12:48:08 Source Media Size: 4,698,767,360 bytes I 12:48:08 Source Media Volume Set Identifier: <>:7=113SCEI I 12:48:08 Source Media Application Identifier: PLAYSTATION I 12:48:08 Source Media Implementation Identifier: DVD-ROM GENERATOR I 12:48:08 Source Media File System(s): ISO9660, UDF (1.02) I 12:48:08 Read Speed (Data/Audio): MAX / 8x I 12:48:08 Destination File: F:\Image.iso I 12:48:08 Destination Free Space: 4,899,130,540,032 Bytes (4,784,307,168.00 KiB) (4,672,174.97 MiB) (4,562.67 GiB) I 12:48:08 Destination File System: NTFS I 12:48:08 File Splitting: Auto I 12:48:09 Read Speed - Effective: 3.3x - 8x I 12:48:11 Reading Session 1 of 1... (1 Track, LBA: 0 - 2294319) I 12:48:11 Reading Track 1 of 1... (MODE1/2048, LBA: 0 - 2294319) W 12:58:06 Failed to Read Sectors 2275232 - 2275263 - Reason: No Seek Complete W 12:58:10 Failed to Read Sector 2275232 - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:10 Sector 2275232 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 12:58:10 Retrying (1 of 20)... W 12:58:13 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:13 Retrying (2 of 20)... W 12:58:16 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:16 Retrying (3 of 20)... W 12:58:19 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:20 Retrying (4 of 20)... W 12:58:23 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:23 Retrying (5 of 20)... W 12:58:26 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:26 Retrying (6 of 20)... W 12:58:29 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:29 Retrying (7 of 20)... W 12:58:32 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:32 Retrying (8 of 20)... W 12:58:35 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:36 Retrying (9 of 20)... W 12:58:39 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:39 Retrying (10 of 20)... W 12:58:42 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:42 Retrying (11 of 20)... W 12:58:45 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:45 Retrying (12 of 20)... W 12:58:48 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:48 Retrying (13 of 20)... W 12:58:51 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:52 Retrying (14 of 20)... W 12:58:54 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:55 Retrying (15 of 20)... W 12:58:58 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:58:58 Retrying (16 of 20)... W 12:59:01 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:59:01 Retrying (17 of 20)... W 12:59:04 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:59:04 Retrying (18 of 20)... W 12:59:07 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:59:07 Retrying (19 of 20)... W 12:59:10 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 12:59:10 Retrying (20 of 20)... W 12:59:13 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:17 Retrying (21)... W 13:00:20 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:22 Retrying (22)... W 13:00:25 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:27 Retrying (23)... W 13:00:30 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:32 Failed to Read Sector 2275232 - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:32 Sector 2275232 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 13:00:35 Failed to Read Sector 2275233 - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:35 Sector 2275233 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd W 13:00:35 Retrying (1 of 20)... W 13:00:38 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:39 Retrying (2 of 20)... W 13:00:42 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:42 Retrying (3 of 20)... W 13:00:45 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:45 Retrying (4 of 20)... W 13:00:48 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error W 13:00:48 Retrying (5 of 20)... I 13:00:49 Abort Request Acknowledged W 13:00:51 Retry Failed - Reason: Track Following Error E 13:00:51 Failed to Read Sector 2275233 - Reason: Track Following Error E 13:00:51 Sector 2275233 maps to File: \movie\title_lp.sfd E 13:00:54 Failed to Read Sectors! I 13:00:55 Exporting Graph Data... I 13:00:55 Graph Data File: C:\Users\O\AppData\Roaming\ImgBurn\Graph Data Files\hp_DVD_RAM_UJ8C2_1.00_SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER-5-2020_12-48_PM_N-A.ibg I 13:00:55 Export Successfully Completed! E 13:00:55 Operation Aborted! - Duration: 00:12:46 E 13:00:55 Average Read Rate: 5,940 KiB/s (4.4x) - Maximum Read Rate: 11,526 KiB/s (8.5x)
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