EdwardMartinIII
Technical User
This seems strange to me (so far).
I buy a box of cheapo ("Great Quality"
DVD-R discs. I use Premiere with the Ligo MPEG plug-in to make my mpeg elementary streams. I use DVDLab to burn the disk. Plays fine on the console unit downstairs.
Then I buy nice Fuji disks. Unlike the "Great Quality" disks, which were a kind of pale green, these are a deep blue, almost purple.
I try burning the larger movie on them (which was built using Premiere 6.5's built-in MPEG encoder). Takes a while. DVD console never able to read 'em. Even if I put them back into the computer, the computer claims the discs are unreadable.
So, I go back to the original machine, which is using an IBM DVD-RAM/-R drive (the new one has a Sony DVD +-r+-rw drive). Three weeks ago, I burned a fine green DVD. Now, I run the SAME DVD project, but burning one of the new blue disks.
And voila -- a shiny coaster! In this last instance, the ONLY thing that changed was the physical media.
I have questions:
1. Do DVDs need to be formatted in some way before you can write to them (theory: the cheapo disks were already formatted, the blue ones not)?
2. Does burning software typically inform you if you're writing to an unformatted disk? (I'm writing to DVDLab with this question)
3. Is there a certain level of quality or necessary-depth-of-burn based on the dye colors?
I've spent the past forty minutes or so looking around online, but haven't found anything that could be considered definitive.
Thanks!
Edward ![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
"Cut a hole in the door. Hang a flap. Criminy, why didn't I think of this earlier?!" -- inventor of the cat door
I buy a box of cheapo ("Great Quality"
Then I buy nice Fuji disks. Unlike the "Great Quality" disks, which were a kind of pale green, these are a deep blue, almost purple.
I try burning the larger movie on them (which was built using Premiere 6.5's built-in MPEG encoder). Takes a while. DVD console never able to read 'em. Even if I put them back into the computer, the computer claims the discs are unreadable.
So, I go back to the original machine, which is using an IBM DVD-RAM/-R drive (the new one has a Sony DVD +-r+-rw drive). Three weeks ago, I burned a fine green DVD. Now, I run the SAME DVD project, but burning one of the new blue disks.
And voila -- a shiny coaster! In this last instance, the ONLY thing that changed was the physical media.
I have questions:
1. Do DVDs need to be formatted in some way before you can write to them (theory: the cheapo disks were already formatted, the blue ones not)?
2. Does burning software typically inform you if you're writing to an unformatted disk? (I'm writing to DVDLab with this question)
3. Is there a certain level of quality or necessary-depth-of-burn based on the dye colors?
I've spent the past forty minutes or so looking around online, but haven't found anything that could be considered definitive.
Thanks!
![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
"Cut a hole in the door. Hang a flap. Criminy, why didn't I think of this earlier?!" -- inventor of the cat door