Hyperion Posted October 10, 2015 Posted October 10, 2015 Hello, ImgBurn forums! I'm trying to burn 1% over the max capacity of a DVD-R. After selecting that I want to continue anyway, I get this error message: This doesn't let me continue and I must abort the burning. After I cancel this message, I get an error saying "Failed to Reserve Track! Reason: Invalid Field in CDB". I guess it might be caused because of the over-reached capacity, but I don't really care about the last few MBs being lost and I can't simply delete a few files before burning. Is there any way to bypass this protection? Or am I wrong and is the problem somewhere else?
dbminter Posted October 10, 2015 Posted October 10, 2015 To be honest, I've never had a DVD overburn that ever succeeded. The only overburn I ever had that succeeded was an audio CD that was about just 30 seconds over the maximum allowable playing time. Also, if you would, copy and paste the log from the log window so we can get some other specifics about this particular burn that failed.
Hyperion Posted October 10, 2015 Author Posted October 10, 2015 I found a way how to make the resulting image a bit smaller. Here is the log anyways, perhaps someone else may be interested in a fix for this, if you want to research it at least. The numbers might slightly differ from the error I posted earlier, as this might be after using a different image that is slightly smaller and I'm not sure which one was which now, but the error itself is the same. I 22:12:24 Operation Started! I 22:12:24 Building Image Tree... I 22:12:24 Checking Directory Depth... I 22:12:24 Calculating Totals... I 22:12:24 Preparing Image... I 22:12:24 Checking Path Length... I 22:12:24 Contents: 9 Files, 2 Folders I 22:12:24 Content Type: DVD Video I 22:12:24 File System(s): ISO9660, UDF (1.02) I 22:12:24 Volume Label: dvd I 22:12:24 IFO/BUP 32K Padding: Enabled I 22:12:24 Region Code: 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8 I 22:12:24 TV System: PAL I 22:12:24 Size: 4 735 678 464 bytes I 22:12:24 Sectors: 2 312 343 I 22:12:24 Image Size: 4 736 286 720 bytes I 22:12:24 Image Sectors: 2 312 640 I 22:12:24 Operation Successfully Completed! - Duration: 00:00:00 W 22:12:25 User accepted disc space warning and is attempting to overburn! I 22:12:25 Operation Started! I 22:12:25 Source File: -==/\/[BUILD IMAGE]\/\==- I 22:12:25 Source File Sectors: 2 312 640 (MODE1/2048) I 22:12:25 Source File Size: 4 736 286 720 bytes I 22:12:25 Source File Volume Identifier: dvd I 22:12:25 Source File Application Identifier: IMGBURN V2.4.4.0 - THE ULTIMATE IMAGE BURNER! I 22:12:25 Source File Implementation Identifier: ImgBurn I 22:12:25 Source File File System(s): ISO9660; UDF (1.02) I 22:12:25 Destination Device: [0:0:0] ASUS DRW-24B5ST 1.00 (F:) (SATA) I 22:12:25 Destination Media Type: DVD-R (Disc ID: MCC 03RG20) (Speeds: 6x; 8x; 12x; 16x) I 22:12:25 Destination Media Sectors: 2 298 496 I 22:12:25 Write Mode: DVD I 22:12:25 Write Type: DAO I 22:12:25 Write Speed: 6x I 22:12:25 Link Size: Auto I 22:12:25 Lock Volume: Yes I 22:12:25 Test Mode: No I 22:12:25 OPC: No I 22:12:25 BURN-Proof: Enabled E 22:12:27 Failed to Reserve Track! - Reason: Invalid Field in CDB E 22:12:28 Operation Failed! - Duration: 00:00:02 I 22:12:28 Average Write Rate: N/A - Maximum Write Rate: N/A
dbminter Posted October 10, 2015 Posted October 10, 2015 I'm no expert in CDB errors. As I said, I never once got a DVD overburn to ever work, so I'd say it just doesn't work! It's not cheap disc quality because you're using Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation media, which is some of the best you can get. So, we can't recommend you try Verbatim DVD because you're already using that.
LIGHTNING UK! Posted October 11, 2015 Posted October 11, 2015 There's no way around it in build mode. If you use the latest version, you could build an oversized ISO and then opt to truncate it when burning in Write mode. As you're only burning a DVD video disc,, it's trivial to shrink it down to a size that'll fit properly... that's the route I'd go.
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