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Re: (idm) overburn question

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1999-08-13 17:43(idm) overburn question
1999-08-13 20:15Helix Tradesman Re: (idm) overburn question
1999-08-13 22:01Eric Melville Re: (idm) overburn question
1999-08-14 01:25Mxyzptlk Re: (idm) overburn question
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1999-08-13 17:43Nyhil@aol.comI remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software being able to
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Fri, 13 Aug 1999 13:43:17 EDT
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(idm) overburn question
permalink · <8f085473.24e5b335@aol.com>
I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software being able to burn more than 74 minutes onto a CD. I'm currently using Sony HotBurn but have CDRWin and Easy CD Creator available. Any pointers?
1999-08-13 20:15Helix Tradesman>I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain > >software being abl
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Helix Tradesman
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Fri, 13 Aug 1999 13:15:43 PDT
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Re: (idm) overburn question
permalink · <19990813201543.95968.qmail@hotmail.com>
quoted 4 lines I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain>I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain > >software being able to burn more than 74 minutes onto a CD. I'm > >currently using Sony HotBurn but have CDRWin and Easy CD Creator > >available. Any pointers?
Overburning is by no means an easy thing, and right off the bat I'll tell you that odds are you physically cannot do it. That being said, here's how you do it: 1) Buy a good cd-r. This is why most people can't overburn. You bought the HP which is about 3/4 to 1/2 the price of a Yamaha or Plextor, and you saved the cash, now you know why. You CANNOT burn with lower quality drives. This may have changed with some newer drives, but in my experience only the really great drives can do it. 2) Get yourself good media. Don't expect more than a 10 second increase if you buy bad media (IMO Memorex, etc). My choices: Verbatim (Not too much overburn time), Sony (pretty good time), Fujitsu (great cds, tres expensive), and TDK which I havn't actually tried, but have heard from numerous people that they are good. 3) Get a good program. Don't use Ez-CD Creator, it won't let you overburn. Don't us CDRWin unless you are very adept at writing good .CUE files (in which case why are you reading this? :). My choice is Nero burning rom which although I find is a bit hard to understand at first, it has options up the ying yang. 4) Burn, and expect a few coasters, and truncated final tracks. This one is pretty self explanatory. Since you aren't supposed to overburn, there are no cut and dry rules as to how much each cd will hold. That depends mainly on the media you use. There is a site which has a database of overburn times for almost every blank cd imaginable, and is quite a good knowledge base for this kind of thing. I don't have the url right now unfortunately. Anyhow, I hope this clears up anything, and also quells this off-topic thread before it gains momentum and hijacks the list like so manny errant threads do. Paelon "It's easy to critasize, but you'd be paranoid too if everyone hated you." - D. J. Hicks ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
1999-08-13 22:01Eric Melvilleusing cdrecord (unix), assuming the drive can position the head that far, you can record s
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Eric Melville
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Fri, 13 Aug 1999 15:01:19 -0700
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Re: (idm) overburn question
permalink · <37B495AF.1E280ED6@rigelfore.com>
using cdrecord (unix), assuming the drive can position the head that far, you can record straight up to the physical end of the cd. it's also about 5 bazillion times more stable than recording a disc under windoze (ever have a blue screen of death while recording? damn i hate wasting discs). of course you'll have to learn a bit about unix, but hey... -E
quoted 3 lines I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software> I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software > being able to burn more than 74 minutes onto a CD. I'm currently using Sony > HotBurn but have CDRWin and Easy CD Creator available. Any pointers?
1999-08-14 01:25MxyzptlkEZCDCD will overburn if you're running 3.01d or above. Just cancel the wizard and ignore t
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Mxyzptlk
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Fri, 13 Aug 1999 20:25:59 -0500
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Re: (idm) overburn question
permalink · <37B4C5A7.CC79A7B1@flash.net>
EZCDCD will overburn if you're running 3.01d or above. Just cancel the wizard and ignore the layout timing. It will eject the tray and let you know if oyu have indeed exceeded the limit of the media. This also applies to 80 min cdrs. CRWin will do the same...it will alert you that you've selected more than 74 min and ask if you wish to continue. EZCDCD has a feature called "disc info" that will show you how many blocks of memory are available on your media. Generally, 74 min cdrs will have 333,000-337,000 blocks; the more blocks, the more space you have. HOWEVER, your burner will have to be able to overburn as will your firmware and I don't know about Sonys. I'd suggest going to their website and checking their FAQs. You may also need to update your firmware there. If you need more help, email me offlist and I'll see if I can be of assistance. jeff Nyhil@aol.com wrote:
quoted 3 lines I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software> I remember hearing something a while back about (perhaps) a certain software > being able to burn more than 74 minutes onto a CD. I'm currently using Sony > HotBurn but have CDRWin and Easy CD Creator available. Any pointers?
-- jeff "10,000 people all screaming the same thing at the same time are wrong, even if they're right." dancing/about/architecture "...with wandering steps and slow..." ICQ904008