crimedogg32 Posted December 21, 2010 Posted December 21, 2010 (edited) I downloaded a .iso file so I would not have to convert it using a program. I was able to successfully burn 3 DVDs which all work if I use windows media player to play the DVD. However if I put it in my XBOX 360 or try to use VLC player to play the DVD, neither work. The only thing I can figure out is when I have the disc in my D drive it says file system: CDFS when I have the burned DVD in and it says file system: UDF when I have an actual DVD in. Does any know what my problem is and if there is a solution? Edited December 21, 2010 by crimedogg32
Rincewind Posted December 21, 2010 Posted December 21, 2010 (edited) Provide a log of the burn from imgburn. If you burned it with imgburn and it burned and verified successfully the problem is not with imgburn then. Edited December 21, 2010 by Rincewind
crimedogg32 Posted December 21, 2010 Author Posted December 21, 2010 I didn't post a log because the burn was successful. Maybe I should rephrase my question. Is there a way to burn a dvd using a file system: UDF or some other format that works in DVD players instead of the file system: CDFS. Also does CDFS ususally work in DVD players and the error is in my player?
Rincewind Posted December 21, 2010 Posted December 21, 2010 (edited) Actually the valid FS for DVD-VIDEO is UDF 1.02, so it looks like your ISO may(?) not valid. Mount it with daemon-tools or open it up as an archive with 7z and extract the VIDEO_TS folder, then check out the guide to burning a DVD-VIDEO disc: http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=1778 Edited December 21, 2010 by Rincewind
crimedogg32 Posted December 21, 2010 Author Posted December 21, 2010 (edited) That worked thank you. Do you know of anyway for me to check if I have a quality .ISO before I waist a bunch of DVDs to see which file system it is formated in? Edited December 21, 2010 by crimedogg32
Cynthia Posted December 21, 2010 Posted December 21, 2010 When you load the image in the write mode, it should state the used file system for you.
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