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Posted

Is it possible to burn a disc so that the actual data is burnt at the outer edge of the disk?.

 

I'm trying to burn a CD with only ~100 MB of data and I wonder if it's possible to fill the rest of the disc with dummy data or something. I thought the Image Start LBA option would be useful but didn't work as I expected. I tried searching the forum but didn't find anything (searching for something with LBA on it won't return any results as the minimum search term is 4 characters).

 

So, is it possible? and if so, how is it done?. Also, does it work for bootable CDs?.

 

I'm using ImgBurn 2.5.2.0.

 

Thanks in advance.

Posted

You can use the new 'Google Custom Search' to search the forum without the limitations of the built in search.

 

'File System Padding' will do what you're after.

 

File data will be put after the padding.

Posted
You can use the new 'Google Custom Search' to search the forum without the limitations of the built in search.

Oh, OK.

 

'File System Padding' will do what you're after.

Great!. Thanks a lot LUK!.

Posted

This was all I could find about this:

 

File System Padding

 

Anything that's not divisible by 16 (sectors) will be padded by the drive when you burn to DVD+ media.

 

The default setting is '0'.

 

So how is the OP's interest fulfilled? Do you determine the exact number of sectors that your files will need, and then put-in to that setting "total disk sectors minus file sectors needed"?

Posted
Do you determine the exact number of sectors that your files will need, and then put-in to that setting "total disk sectors minus file sectors needed"?

 

Yup.

 

Use the the 'Calculate' button to get the normal size (in sectors) of the entire image (with that setting on 0), then adjust the value to suit.

Posted

Another ImgBurn capability I didn't know about. Thank you--amazing program! :teehee:

 

Do you determine the exact number of sectors that your files will need, and then put-in to that setting "total disk sectors minus file sectors needed"?

Yup.

 

Use the the 'Calculate' button to get the normal size (in sectors) of the entire image (with that setting on 0), then adjust the value to suit.

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