Troops:
In investigating the jerkiness in a DVD presentation I did the following:
I made a copy of a movie (Spiderman...not bad) on a DVD -R disk. The disks are a no name product purchased at a computer show...50 for$15.00 so it can't be all that good but they are fine for this experiment.
I used SHRINK and READYNOW DX to prepare the disk.
I then made a copy of this disk using another disk from the purchased lot. The copy was also made using READYNOW.
I then viewed the disk using POWER DVD in a TOSHIBA SATELITE PRO laptop. It ran fine for 23 minutes at which point it started to get jerky. I stopped the play, removed the disk and inserted the copied disk. I then initiated the play at the point where the first disk started to get jerky. The playing proceeded fine, without jerkiness. The first disk had been set aside. After about 20 minutes the second disk started to fail in the same jerky manner. I stopped the playing again and inserted the first disk. Once again I started the play at the point where the second disk had exhibited the jerkiness and now the first disk played just fine from that point .
I think you get the idea now that the disk, while just slightly warm to the touch, seems to be failing (getting jerky) due to the heat inside the laptop. I am not talking "Hot". I meanjust warm.
I am not that familiar with the DVD process but something dimensionally is changing on the metalized surface of ther DVD and causing the jerkiness. Has any one a recommended disk that has dimensional stability under heated conditions?
Has anyone an explanation of what might be happening?
David
In investigating the jerkiness in a DVD presentation I did the following:
I made a copy of a movie (Spiderman...not bad) on a DVD -R disk. The disks are a no name product purchased at a computer show...50 for$15.00 so it can't be all that good but they are fine for this experiment.
I used SHRINK and READYNOW DX to prepare the disk.
I then made a copy of this disk using another disk from the purchased lot. The copy was also made using READYNOW.
I then viewed the disk using POWER DVD in a TOSHIBA SATELITE PRO laptop. It ran fine for 23 minutes at which point it started to get jerky. I stopped the play, removed the disk and inserted the copied disk. I then initiated the play at the point where the first disk started to get jerky. The playing proceeded fine, without jerkiness. The first disk had been set aside. After about 20 minutes the second disk started to fail in the same jerky manner. I stopped the playing again and inserted the first disk. Once again I started the play at the point where the second disk had exhibited the jerkiness and now the first disk played just fine from that point .
I think you get the idea now that the disk, while just slightly warm to the touch, seems to be failing (getting jerky) due to the heat inside the laptop. I am not talking "Hot". I meanjust warm.
I am not that familiar with the DVD process but something dimensionally is changing on the metalized surface of ther DVD and causing the jerkiness. Has any one a recommended disk that has dimensional stability under heated conditions?
Has anyone an explanation of what might be happening?
David
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