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Are you referring to data discs or audio discs? AFAIK IsoBuster can do surface scanning for data discs and identify the files which lie on bad sectors. Not sure if this features also works for audio discs (especially since CDDA lack the additional EDC/ECC code).
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
No, what Nero and IsoBuster do is very different.
When Nero writes data to an optical media it has the source data at hand, and later (after writing) it compares this source data with the data it extracts from the optical media. If the source and extracted data differ then Nero gives an error. IsoBuster can't do this, because it simply has not the original source data to verify against. It can only extract each sector and check if the data part of the sector fits with the included EDC/ECC fields. As already said, the CDDA has virtually no error detection and correction code at this media level, so IsoBuster might not detect bad media errors. What I can do however is to check C1 and C2 state of the drive, but I'm only guessing here. The problem is even more complicated with audio discs if you take the read and write offset into consideration. Probably the audio data was written correctly but Nero fails to detect the right write/read offset combination to get an in-sync extraction. And so the comparison between source data and written data fails (because 0-samples still affect CRCs and other hash types). There is this Windows-tool KProbe that works with Lite-On devices (I don't know if that only applies to the PI/PO extraction), but you might want to try that to do an C1/C2 scan of the media. If the drive gives correct C1/C2 information you should be a pretty good impression of the media state by looking at the final graph which KProbe generates from the scanning. Additional Spam:
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Last edited by LiquidAcid; Dec 2, 2007 at 12:31 PM.
Reason: This member got a little too post happy.
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Funny thing.
So you have like this setup: 1) mastering audio data in Nero 2) create an image with the Nero image recorder 3) mount image with dtools 4) extract image+cue with isobuster 5) burn image with nero with verification I might have a better idea. Do steps 1) and 2) in Nero and then use the popular ImgBurn application to do the rest. How ya doing, buddy? |
You shouldn't burn your discs with such high speed. Writing quality is the best when choosing a low write speed which is covered by the write strategy table in the media ATIP. I think ImgBurn should tell you what strategies are available for your media.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |