Symptoms of a dying DVD drive?
- Red_5
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Symptoms of a dying DVD drive?
I'm trying to copy my virtual orchestra libraries from disc to my hard drive. So far I've encountered nasty buzzing noises, inability to read DVDs on the first several tries (CDs read ok), unbelievably slow copying speeds (right now it's taking over ten minutes to copy 47.9mb of data), outright refusal to copy (hangs on \"Estimating Time Remaining\" and forces me to restart Explorer).
Specs:
Dell Dimension C521, about 5 years old
Windows 7 Home Premium
Stock DVD drive (TSSTcorp)
1.8GHZ AMD Sempron
2GB Ram
Thanks!
Specs:
Dell Dimension C521, about 5 years old
Windows 7 Home Premium
Stock DVD drive (TSSTcorp)
1.8GHZ AMD Sempron
2GB Ram
Thanks!
- Krom
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Burned disks have a limited shelf life, although burnable DVDs haven't even been around long enough for a good quality burn to degrade to unreadable state yet. If the disk or the burn was of poor quality though, older disks could be running out of life. Best way is to check the same disks in a different drive (although some drives will still read better than others).
Also it could be dust/debris on the lens, a good blast of clean compressed air can't hurt at any rate.
Also it could be dust/debris on the lens, a good blast of clean compressed air can't hurt at any rate.
- captain_twinkie
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- Krom
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Re:
Correct, they are struck with a die much like coins in order to efficiently mass produce them.Thenior wrote:Commercial discs are actually stamped.
For early disks there is a type of mold that can get into the laminate and destroy the data layer, but there is plainly visible discoloration when that happens so it is pretty unlikely.
Normally dusting isn't necessary, the drag created by the rotating disks keeps the lens clean of dust. So my guess is that the drive is on the way out, esp. if it's older -- laser diodes have a limited lifetime and the pickup assembly looses alignment from mechanical wear. A good DVD burner should be around US$25.