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I've heard that some burnable DVDs have a bad success rate, while others are more successful in copying a movie. In addition, I've heard that it's not always the brand name, but also the factory where it was produced. Any help would be appreciated :-)

2007-01-05 02:35:53 · 3 answers · asked by AW 1 in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

3 answers

Go with ones based on ridata (either official ridata/ritek or a company that uses their dye, pretty sure maxell does)

Also make sure you don't go over the recommended burn speed, as some drives do

i had some 8x maxells that benq has determined would burn fine in their burner at 12x, this may be true for most purposes (like data storage) but for dvds to be played in a tv set top dvd player u should burn slower if possible (be patient, u get a better burn that way)

Anyways, when ever u can u should choose the burn speed, dont just let the program use "max"

2007-01-05 03:40:24 · answer #1 · answered by Rovaals 2 · 0 0

Hmmm a toughie. What happens is that if you try to burn a DVD that is copyprotected it may ruin that DVD, hence a bad DVD. You may copy, for example, a home movie on a DVD. To copy DVD movies with a high success rate you need to "rip" not "burn" the DVD. I heard that 321 studios DVD X Copy with rip feature may still be sold on line. The company itself was sued and closed down. You have to look on the internet for places that sell this copier.

2007-01-05 02:41:26 · answer #2 · answered by Big C 6 · 0 0

yep, with dvds you have to pony up.

2007-01-05 02:37:39 · answer #3 · answered by fabrat1 3 · 0 0

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