Buying a DVD Burner Drive?

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  • Dude2003
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Mar 2003
    • 32

    Buying a DVD Burner Drive?

    I want to buy a dvd burner drive for my computer. but there are so many choices. I would like it to read,play and burn vcd's on to dvd-r. And if i buy a dvd r drive does it just burn dvds? or do i still need to rip it? and will it still take hours to rip or burn a dvd? an d will i still need to use a program like... nero?
    If you can't dazzle them with your brilliance, baffle them with your bull****. I'm not smart, but I like to observe. Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why.
  • vljenewein
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Jan 2003
    • 48

    #2
    CenDyne makes a DVD -R buner that is becomming pretty reasonably priced. It is made by Pioneer and their latest offering is a 4X model. Quite fast.. compares to the equivalent of 32X on regular CD.

    Yes you need to rip the DVD to hard drive first. DVD's are copy protected. and you need something to remove the Macrovision and encription first. You cannot simply copy "on-the-fly" like you can on some CDs.

    You will need a ripper like DVD Decrypter to rip movie to HD.
    You will need a transcoder as such like DVD2ONE or DVD95COPY or Pinacles Instant Copy. as most movies are larger than than 4.7 GB in size. You can get around this using programs like IFOEdit, and REMPEG2, or CCE etc.. but that is pretty involved and requires a lot of time and editing capabilities. There are free programs out there that allow you to do all you ask to do, but they are not simple, and you will have to read, read, read about how these things work and how to work them the way you want.

    You can also burn CDs on a CenDyne burner. I know because I have. I believ others all have this capability also. Mine burns at 16 X in CD mode. Not as fast as my Yamaha, but it's a copromise thingy.

    DVD2ONE link
    DVD95COPY link

    Nero link for updates

    Hope this is helpful so you or others.
    Vernon Jenewein
    jenefarm@direcway.com

    Abit KV8MAX3, with AMD64 3200+
    Maxtor 120GB ATA133 IDE hard drive
    Maxtor 80GB SATA150 Hard drive
    Leadtek WinFast TV2000 Xpert video card
    1 GB Kingston Hyper-X DDR333
    Nvidia MX440 64MB DDR Video card
    Aopen 8X DVD R/RW/ combo
    Aopen 52X CD R/RW DVD combo
    Toshiba 16X DVD drive
    DW6000 Satellite 2-way Internet


    Former Nebraskan.. "fix it with bailin' wire . "

    Comment

    • vljenewein
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • Jan 2003
      • 48

      #3
      I re-read your original post and it talks about VCDs. You only need a CD burner to make VCD or S-VCD if I am correct. If not, someone else jump right on in and correct me. Either way you still need to rip the DVD movie to Hard Drive.
      Vernon Jenewein
      jenefarm@direcway.com

      Abit KV8MAX3, with AMD64 3200+
      Maxtor 120GB ATA133 IDE hard drive
      Maxtor 80GB SATA150 Hard drive
      Leadtek WinFast TV2000 Xpert video card
      1 GB Kingston Hyper-X DDR333
      Nvidia MX440 64MB DDR Video card
      Aopen 8X DVD R/RW/ combo
      Aopen 52X CD R/RW DVD combo
      Toshiba 16X DVD drive
      DW6000 Satellite 2-way Internet


      Former Nebraskan.. "fix it with bailin' wire . "

      Comment

      • chickeneater
        Digital Video Expert
        Digital Video Expert
        • Apr 2002
        • 672

        #4
        check this link out www.dvdrhelp.com this is a good site to walk you through making almost anything related to digital video.
        FFDShow filters
        Guliverkli's Media Player Classic

        Comment

        • DVDIdiot
          Gold Member
          Gold Member
          • Oct 2002
          • 113

          #5
          Dude2003,

          You've alread got an answer to your question so there's no need for me to repeat...But the best place to get your DVD Burner is at
          www.pricewatch.com
          DVD Step-by-Step Guides
          http://dvdplanet.fateback.com

          Comment

          • alcskid
            Movie Lovers
            • Jan 2003
            • 170

            #6
            Also watch out for DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD-RAM compatibility !

            Most FAQ about DVD Compatibility can be read at http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html

            Most of DVD recordable disc can not be read at standalone DVD player. So you must reconsider it too.
            ...My Foot Print...

            Comment

            • Bretty
              Junior Member
              Junior Member
              • Jul 2002
              • 29

              #7
              So what your saying is that there is no was you can just grab a DVD burner, get one of your already owned movies, and make an exact copy of it?
              Artificial Intellegence, will never replace human stupidity

              Comment

              • alcskid
                Movie Lovers
                • Jan 2003
                • 170

                #8
                Well, you can do an exact copy and grabbing. But some old standalone DVD player can't read DVD-R media. If you bought the latest DVD player and on it's manual said capable to read DVD-R, then it can read your exact backup copy.
                ...My Foot Print...

                Comment

                • Bretty
                  Junior Member
                  Junior Member
                  • Jul 2002
                  • 29

                  #9
                  How do you know if the disk is 4.37 gig or not?

                  As I understand it though you cant burn dual layer disks yet (research done about 1 hour ago) and I think most movies are dual layer...

                  Bretty
                  Artificial Intellegence, will never replace human stupidity

                  Comment

                  • alcskid
                    Movie Lovers
                    • Jan 2003
                    • 170

                    #10
                    Well, that's very easy. Instead of just looking at DVD disc cover (Media capacity written there), you can use some tool like Nero and use Medium Info at Recorder menu.

                    Actually Dual layer DVD-R had been produced. You can search it at DVD-R retail shop online or offline.
                    ...My Foot Print...

                    Comment

                    • SKD_Tech
                      Lord of Digital Video
                      Lord of Digital Video
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 1512

                      #11
                      Well I just bought a Sony DRU 500 but I haven't tried it out. I heard it is great with it's compatibitlity with basicly everything

                      Comment

                      • setarip
                        Retired
                        • Dec 2001
                        • 24955

                        #12
                        To alcskid

                        "Actually Dual layer DVD-R had been produced."

                        I believe you've misinterpreted what you've read. There are, in fact, DOUBLE-SIDED DVD-Rs (NOT dual layer) available. these are essentially two single layer DVD-Rs pasted back-to-back...

                        Comment

                        • setarip
                          Retired
                          • Dec 2001
                          • 24955

                          #13
                          To Bretty

                          "How do you know if the disk is 4.37 gig or not?"

                          After you've "ripped" (using DVDDecrypter or similar) the DVD to your hard drive, simply rightclick on the DVD's folder and select properties.

                          Use a commercial program such as DVD95Copy to convert (if necessary, by compression) your "ripped" DVD to 4.37Gigs maximum size. Then use NERO to burn...

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