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CD-R erratically detected
On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his
old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** If at first you DO succeed, try not to look astonished! |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
"glee" wrote in
: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. -- Lots of theoretical butchers are alleged and other bloody eyes are suitable, but will Pam secure that? |
CD-R erratically detected
"glee" wrote in
: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. -- Lots of theoretical butchers are alleged and other bloody eyes are suitable, but will Pam secure that? |
CD-R erratically detected
thanatoid wrote:
"glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. |
CD-R erratically detected
thanatoid wrote:
"glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , RobertVA
writes: thanatoid wrote: "glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. (The PC's in the spare bedroom, and I don't think John or his wife smoke.) It's not a daft suggestion, which I may try, though I don't _think_ it is likely to be the problem; if I put a data CD in, Explorer usually sees it. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** If at first you DO succeed, try not to look astonished! |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , RobertVA
writes: thanatoid wrote: "glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. (The PC's in the spare bedroom, and I don't think John or his wife smoke.) It's not a daft suggestion, which I may try, though I don't _think_ it is likely to be the problem; if I put a data CD in, Explorer usually sees it. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** If at first you DO succeed, try not to look astonished! |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Try a different brand of CD blanks...Taiyo Yuden are among the best. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Try a different brand of CD blanks...Taiyo Yuden are among the best. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? You said it's an elderly PC so I'm guess the cdrom is also elderly... probably time for a new one |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On an elderly PC I help a friend with, where he's copying a lot of his old LPs to CD, we use burn4free (though I think the problem is not with burn4free itself). More often than not, when hitting the "burn" button, it says "please insert a disc" - even if there's one in. When, by fiddling, ejecting, closing and reopening b4f, and so on, it finally decides that there _is_ a blank disc in, it does the burn fine. While looking, it rattles the floppy drive before it "finds" the writer (from within b4f, that is). It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? You said it's an elderly PC so I'm guess the cdrom is also elderly... probably time for a new one |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , Andy
writes: [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Try a different brand of CD blanks...Taiyo Yuden are among the best. And once you've wasted a couple of quality blank CDs, throw the drive away and spend $20-$30 to replace it. It's ****ed. They don't last forever. I think if it was the blanks, it wouldn't have been burning faultlessly for the last few times we did manage to make it realise there was a disc present. (And with cheap blanks, too.) It's not that old - only a year or two; the elderly PC had a non-writing drive (still there). It's actually a CD and DVD writer, as I couldn't even find a CD-only one. It's not been used much. I will try the cleaning disc suggestion, but I do think it's a system configuration funny: as I mentioned earlier, when burn4free is told to do a burn, it accesses the floppy drive before getting to the writer. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** If at first you DO succeed, try not to look astonished! |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... In message , RobertVA writes: thanatoid wrote: "glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. (The PC's in the spare bedroom, and I don't think John or his wife smoke.) It's not a daft suggestion, which I may try, though I don't _think_ it is likely to be the problem; if I put a data CD in, Explorer usually sees it. @than: Yes, I was serious....a cleaning disc has helped in almost identical situations for me in the past, a number of times. @J.P.: If you really do mean "Explorer usually sees it" rather than "Explorer always sees it", then a cleaning disc may help. The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. It's also possible the drive is just getting old and taking too long to recognize the blank disc. Have you tried another burning program? -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... In message , RobertVA writes: thanatoid wrote: "glee" wrote in : "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Did you try cleaning the lens with an audio cleaning disc? You can not be serious. With all the air that cooling fans draw through tower systems? There might even be contaminates in the air from cooking or tobacco smoking. (The PC's in the spare bedroom, and I don't think John or his wife smoke.) It's not a daft suggestion, which I may try, though I don't _think_ it is likely to be the problem; if I put a data CD in, Explorer usually sees it. @than: Yes, I was serious....a cleaning disc has helped in almost identical situations for me in the past, a number of times. @J.P.: If you really do mean "Explorer usually sees it" rather than "Explorer always sees it", then a cleaning disc may help. The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. It's also possible the drive is just getting old and taking too long to recognize the blank disc. Have you tried another burning program? -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: [] @than: Yes, I was serious....a cleaning disc has helped in almost identical situations for me in the past, a number of times. I'll certainly try it, then. .: If you really do mean "Explorer usually sees it" rather than "Explorer always sees it", then a cleaning disc may help. I think it always sees the drive as present, just not always with anything in it. Your line of reasoning makes sense. The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). I've still got plenty of those, so will try. It's also possible the drive is just getting old and taking too long to recognize the blank disc. Possibly. Until he started burning (he's done less than a dozen albums, I think) he hardly ever used CDs, even for reading (in which case he'd have probably used the older drive anyway). Have you tried another burning program? Initially I used Easy CD Creator - I know a lot of people don't think much of it, but I was used to it, and it seemed to work fine. (I used updates, which were necessary for it to recognise the new drive.) After a complete system rebuild - I forget what prompted that, but it was, I'm pretty sure, necessary (no point in discussing it, anyway - 'tis done) - I couldn't get ECDC to recognise the drive, whatever I did, hence the installation of burn4free. Until the recent problems, _that_ has been working fine too. I've downloaded burnaware_free, deep_burner, and microburner, and will try one or all next time I visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** "We've all heard that a million monkeys banging on a million typewriters will eventually reproduce the entire Works of Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet, we know this is not true." Robert Wilensky, computer science division, University of California Digital Library Project, 1996 (Computing 1999-12-16) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: [] @than: Yes, I was serious....a cleaning disc has helped in almost identical situations for me in the past, a number of times. I'll certainly try it, then. .: If you really do mean "Explorer usually sees it" rather than "Explorer always sees it", then a cleaning disc may help. I think it always sees the drive as present, just not always with anything in it. Your line of reasoning makes sense. The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). I've still got plenty of those, so will try. It's also possible the drive is just getting old and taking too long to recognize the blank disc. Possibly. Until he started burning (he's done less than a dozen albums, I think) he hardly ever used CDs, even for reading (in which case he'd have probably used the older drive anyway). Have you tried another burning program? Initially I used Easy CD Creator - I know a lot of people don't think much of it, but I was used to it, and it seemed to work fine. (I used updates, which were necessary for it to recognise the new drive.) After a complete system rebuild - I forget what prompted that, but it was, I'm pretty sure, necessary (no point in discussing it, anyway - 'tis done) - I couldn't get ECDC to recognise the drive, whatever I did, hence the installation of burn4free. Until the recent problems, _that_ has been working fine too. I've downloaded burnaware_free, deep_burner, and microburner, and will try one or all next time I visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** "We've all heard that a million monkeys banging on a million typewriters will eventually reproduce the entire Works of Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet, we know this is not true." Robert Wilensky, computer science division, University of California Digital Library Project, 1996 (Computing 1999-12-16) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , "J. P. Gilliver (John)"
wrote: In message , Andy writes: [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Try a different brand of CD blanks...Taiyo Yuden are among the best. And once you've wasted a couple of quality blank CDs, throw the drive away and spend $20-$30 to replace it. It's ****ed. They don't last forever. I think if it was the blanks, it wouldn't have been burning faultlessly for the last few times we did manage to make it realise there was a disc present. (And with cheap blanks, too.) Will it recongnise if theres a disc in the drive that has data on it? If so then its probably the media itself. CD/RW discs are a problem sometimes. It's not that old - only a year or two; the elderly PC had a non-writing drive (still there). It's actually a CD and DVD writer, as I couldn't even find a CD-only one. It's not been used much. Did you ever drop it? :) I will try the cleaning disc suggestion, but I do think it's a system configuration funny: as I mentioned earlier, when burn4free is told to do a burn, it accesses the floppy drive before getting to the writer. Then you need to g00gle up the website for that app and look for a support section, mate. -- http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/wolves/ Proof of Americas 3rd world status: http://www.ramusa.org/ Cash for *who*? http://www.bartcop.com/list-the-facts.htm http://www.pavlovianobeisance.com/ |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... snip Initially I used Easy CD Creator - I know a lot of people don't think much of it, but I was used to it, and it seemed to work fine. (I used updates, which were necessary for it to recognise the new drive.) After a complete system rebuild - I forget what prompted that, but it was, I'm pretty sure, necessary (no point in discussing it, anyway - 'tis done) - I couldn't get ECDC to recognise the drive, whatever I did, hence the installation of burn4free. Until the recent problems, _that_ has been working fine too. I've downloaded burnaware_free, deep_burner, and microburner, and will try one or all next time I visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... snip Initially I used Easy CD Creator - I know a lot of people don't think much of it, but I was used to it, and it seemed to work fine. (I used updates, which were necessary for it to recognise the new drive.) After a complete system rebuild - I forget what prompted that, but it was, I'm pretty sure, necessary (no point in discussing it, anyway - 'tis done) - I couldn't get ECDC to recognise the drive, whatever I did, hence the installation of burn4free. Until the recent problems, _that_ has been working fine too. I've downloaded burnaware_free, deep_burner, and microburner, and will try one or all next time I visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , dadiOH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , dadiOH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... In message , glee writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) I haven't used it for music ripping/conversion/etc., so I can't say if that setting applies to it also. Why not try and find out? It can't hurt (too much) eg -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message
... In message , glee writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) I haven't used it for music ripping/conversion/etc., so I can't say if that setting applies to it also. Why not try and find out? It can't hurt (too much) eg -- Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 A+ http://dts-l.net/ |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... In message , glee writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) I haven't used it for music ripping/conversion/etc., so I can't say if that setting applies to it also. Why not try and find out? It can't hurt (too much) eg I intend to! -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , glee
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... In message , glee writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ... [] visit John; the trouble is, I don't know if they allow the temp. files location to be specified as burn4free does, and there's not really enough space on the C drive. Which version of Microburner? I have versions 4.x and 5.x here. Silentnight Microburner 5.x has a place in its "burner settings" to choose the temp location. I don't see any way to do it with version 4.x, though. 5.0. Under burner settings, I see something called "Temporary ISO folder placement" under "Direct Copy/Clone Settings", which I presume is something to do with copying one CD to another. I have wondered whether it also uses the folder specified for temporary .wav files, but have yet to find out; if you know that it does, I'll be pleased to try - it looks a nice piece of software. (And the speech is fun.) I haven't used it for music ripping/conversion/etc., so I can't say if that setting applies to it also. Why not try and find out? It can't hurt (too much) eg I intend to! -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , dadiOH writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. Right. I was suggesting it as an alternative to your previous buffer problem. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , dadiOH writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: The suggestion elsewhere in this thread about trying a different brand of disc is also a good idea, especially if the issue is *only* with burning discs, not reading them. The first few we did were with cheap unlabelled ones, which were mostly fine (we had a couple of part-burned ones, but that was I think more a buffer problem - it is a BURN-proof drive, and the software knows that, but still; and moving the "temporary files" space for the .mp3-to-wav conversion to a different partition, combined with reducing the burning speed, seemed to solve that). A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. Right. I was suggesting it as an alternative to your previous buffer problem. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
CD-R erratically detected
Meat Plow wrote:
On Sat, 17 Oct 2009 09:02:14 -0600, ???hw??f wrote: In message , "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Andy writes: [] It isn't the _drive_ that's not being detected - that always shows up in explorer; it's only the fact that there's a blank disc in it that is so often missed. Any ideas what's causing it, and what will improve it? Try a different brand of CD blanks...Taiyo Yuden are among the best. And once you've wasted a couple of quality blank CDs, throw the drive away and spend $20-$30 to replace it. It's ****ed. They don't last forever. I think if it was the blanks, it wouldn't have been burning faultlessly for the last few times we did manage to make it realise there was a disc present. (And with cheap blanks, too.) Will it recongnise if theres a disc in the drive that has data on it? If so then its probably the media itself. CD/RW discs are a problem sometimes. It's not that old - only a year or two; the elderly PC had a non-writing drive (still there). It's actually a CD and DVD writer, as I couldn't even find a CD-only one. It's not been used much. Did you ever drop it? :) I will try the cleaning disc suggestion, but I do think it's a system configuration funny: as I mentioned earlier, when burn4free is told to do a burn, it accesses the floppy drive before getting to the writer. Then you need to g00gle up the website for that app and look for a support section, mate. Appears he's got some corruption in his system part of the registry. If so tehn he s gotta uninstall it and do surgery on the registyryry to remove all the diseased bits. ^_^ |
CD-R erratically detected
Here a suggestion if he trying to burn cds. Lower the speed down to
12x (Yes, you have to wait longer, but it is more reliable to have the data stored correctly). I notice when my burners are going bad, you can use lower speed for a few months till it quits. My lasted for about a year. Greg |
CD-R erratically detected
Here a suggestion if he trying to burn cds. Lower the speed down to
12x (Yes, you have to wait longer, but it is more reliable to have the data stored correctly). I notice when my burners are going bad, you can use lower speed for a few months till it quits. My lasted for about a year. Greg |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , dadiOH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: [] A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. Right. I was suggesting it as an alternative to your previous buffer problem. Ah, understood, thanks. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , dadiOH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: [] A fail-safe method is to just decode the MP3s to wave yourself then burn the waves. Many programs to do decoding/encoding, CDex is good, easy and free. http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/ GoldWave (with Lame) too. But (a) that part of Burn4Free seems to have worked fine anyway, (b) I suspect it (burnfree) would still intermittently fail to detect there was a blank in the drive, when we tried to burn the .wavs. Right. I was suggesting it as an alternative to your previous buffer problem. Ah, understood, thanks. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , S??hW0?Æ’
writes: Meat Plow wrote: [] I will try the cleaning disc suggestion, but I do think it's a system configuration funny: as I mentioned earlier, when burn4free is told to do a burn, it accesses the floppy drive before getting to the writer. Then you need to g00gle up the website for that app and look for a support section, mate. Appears he's got some corruption in his system part of the registry. That is (the sort of thing I) fear, but wouldn't know how ... If so tehn he s gotta uninstall it and do surgery on the registyryry to remove all the diseased bits. .... to do that. (The surgery I mean.) ^_^ -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
CD-R erratically detected
In message , S??hW0?Æ’
writes: Meat Plow wrote: [] I will try the cleaning disc suggestion, but I do think it's a system configuration funny: as I mentioned earlier, when burn4free is told to do a burn, it accesses the floppy drive before getting to the writer. Then you need to g00gle up the website for that app and look for a support section, mate. Appears he's got some corruption in his system part of the registry. That is (the sort of thing I) fear, but wouldn't know how ... If so tehn he s gotta uninstall it and do surgery on the registyryry to remove all the diseased bits. .... to do that. (The surgery I mean.) ^_^ -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** At least with a British car, you know that everything that falls off it is a product of true British workmanship. (Lord somethingorother on Robin Day's programme, 1980-1-15.) |
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