dvd movie burn help?
December 30th, 2020
Use ConvertX to DVD
use convertxtodvd , also be aware that the dvd disc you use
can be related,if its a bad quality one it can cause skips and such
you should try verbatim 16x dvd+r (made in taiwan) great discs
yes, use convertx, and try burning at a slower speed, you’ll get fewer errors that cause things to skip.
Use ConvertX to DVD
that can still cause the above problems if not defined properly. What you want is the slow speeds option and disc quality/type
honestly , i dont get why some ppl insist on slow speed
when it comes right down to it , whatever speed you use
the data will be written just as same , the speed can affect the burn quality but it should not cause any type
of data corruption
[b]edit[/b btw a too slow speed can negativly
affect the burn quality
Use ConvertX to DVD
that can still cause the above problems if not defined properly. What you want is the slow speeds option and disc quality/type
I have always burnt at the fastest speed possible
Never had a problem
I have always burnt at the fastest speed possible
honestly , i dont get why some ppl insist on slow speed
when it comes right down to it , whatever speed you use
the data will be written just as same , the speed can
affect the burn quality but it should not cause any type
of data corruption
no but i once forgot to turn down the speed, vid was un watchable. Now Rob, data will be written the same but at high speeds there is that chance that the laser skips and therefore causing the whole thing to be screwed. Slower speeds actually gives the laser time to track and burn easier. Faster it travels faster so to must the laser and if one sector is missed, poom the whole thing is a coaster
Well my laser hasnt missed a sector yet
I will keep that in mind though
mine neither, if you use a quality disc you will never have a problem
no matter what speed you use
if you use a quality disc you will never have a problem
i burn CD movies and it has happened once or twice with my TDK Gold discs so they arent generic. Sometimes you may get lucky at high speeds, other times not but not is the higher chance
if you use a quality disc you will never have a problem
i burn CD movies and it has happened once or twice with my TDK Gold discs so they arent generic. Sometimes you may get lucky at high speeds, other times not but not is the higher chance
I Use TDK Silver DVD-R and never had a problem
Probably burnt about 200 Movies
i like the logic being used here. let’s apply it to another situation:
i drive really really fast and i have not crashed and died yet because my car is very accurate and goes exactly where i point it, even at super high speeds, and because i always drive on good quality roads.
i therefore find no statistical correlation between the speed at which i drive and the likelihood that i will crash and die.
i’m gonna call up my insurance company and let the know they should lower my rates!
if you use a quality disc you will never have a problem
i burn CD movies and it has happened once or twice with my TDK Gold discs so they arent generic. Sometimes you may get lucky at high speeds, other times not but not is the higher chance
dude there are some things you dont know
tdk and other brands dont actually manufacture
their own cd/dvd discs,there are a number of diffrent
factories for that mostly based in taiwan/hong kong/china/india
that manufacture for em now each cd/dvd disc contains a media code,this is how your burner
identifies it and knows what write strategies/speeds to use,this is
what a burners firmware updates..more media codes/write stategies
support , if your burner doesnt support the specific media code
then it will not be able to burn to it or will use a generic write strategy
that wont be as good , if you wanna know the REAL manufacturer
you should use nero infotool or cdfreaks dvd identifier,each optical disc
manufacturer have its own code for every speed/type (+ or – etc) ,
also of course a burner doesnt support all media codes equally
hence it will burn in a better quality to some discs more then others
set that aside there is the quality of the actual disc , and of course
the things you do while burnning if its hd/cpu intensive can have
a negative effect and alot of dust inside the burner may affect it too so just because you have “tdk gold” discs it doesnt mean their top notch
or that your burner really likes em
so just because you have "tdk gold" discs it doesnt mean their top notch
or that your burner really likes em
i never said they were top notch. Just saying that its better to burn at slow speeds, not everyone has the same burner. Some cheaper ones may not contain that. Relating to , it depends on the type of car. You can get a cheap one with bad traction control, steering, brakes etc So when looking at these topics, dont assume that everyone has a good reliable burner- assume the possible
Just saying that its better to burn at slow speeds, not everyone has the same burner. Some cheaper ones may not contain that.
that is simply a myth,a bit slower burnning speed
can affect the burn quality but no matter what speed you use
it will never cause data corruption/reading issues as long as the disc is in good quality and the burner like it
what exactly do you mean by “contain that”? for now
i would assume your refering to media codes,FYI
all burners contain that,its the way they work
Mine was just a cheap 50 dollar burner from Big W
well theres some stuff on low speed burning:
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/nov04/articles/qa1104-3.htm
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2543?viewlocale=en_US
just note, its not just the “generic” code used. ~love~ quality discs arent manufactured properly and therefore the pits/grooves wont be in good condition for high speeds. So you should assume low to med quality discs unless specified
thanks all . i thought it might be my burn program. its only on loud sound parts of movies was thinking it was sounds rate thanks