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  1. Have any of you faced problems with the functionality of your DVD drive after you ripped a DVD directly from the DVD-ROM?

    Also, did you ever see that the DVD that you ripped got damaged?

    I am asking this question because I want to follow this guide and am not sure if i should:
    http://www.vcdhelp.com/dvdbackup.htm
    "With great power comes great responsibility"
    WHO AM I? - I'm SPIDERMAN-(for real)
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  2. I've done exactly that only using DVDx 1.6 and had no probs afterwards. Just give it a big buffer if you're going to rip and encode using DVDx as frameserver. You may also need to edit the avs script to specify the path for"avisynthEX.dll"
    entirely TOO much time on my hands
    -------------------------------------------
    www.easydvdcopy.net
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  3. Member
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    No problem here, have done two DVD's already this way.
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  4. am i right in thinking that dvdx is an all in 1 ripping/encoding program? if so then your dvd rom is going to get ever so hot possibly causing damage to the unit and source disc
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  5. people need to lighten up, if you believe you are
    gonna cause damage,to the disc or the drive,which
    you dont, maybe you should just not be here....

    ___________________________________________
    there are still users out there that never do nothing..
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  6. So should I go for it?
    "With great power comes great responsibility"
    WHO AM I? - I'm SPIDERMAN-(for real)
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  7. i wouldnt, having looked at your puter spec, the whole process is going to take a looooong time! would you really want your dvd rom spinning for upwards of 8 hours?
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  8. ok...i guess i'll just have to do it one vob at a time...since i have crap harddrive space...thanx a lot guys.
    "With great power comes great responsibility"
    WHO AM I? - I'm SPIDERMAN-(for real)
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  9. If you have enough available Ram, in this case 512+, you can set a buffer size in DVDx so it spins up the DVD and reads say 256MB into RAM and then encodes from that. When that's done, it spins up the DVD-ROM again and reads another 256MB into RAM and so on. It' won't spin your DVD-ROM 100% of the encode time unless you let it
    entirely TOO much time on my hands
    -------------------------------------------
    www.easydvdcopy.net
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  10. Member
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    On my PC, the light on DVD flashes about 30-60% duty cycle... So I would not say it is staying on all the time. My DVD's have had no ill effects so far any way.
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  11. Member
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    And for the record... DVDX is the "ripper/player", and is in this case the frameserver (with VFAPI and frameserve plugin). I'm Encoding with TMPGEnc pulling in frameserve .AVS file. I only have a 400 MHz machine, so encoding a movie takes 10-12 hours, even just for VCD quality stuff.
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  12. Originally Posted by musher70
    people need to lighten up, if you believe you are
    gonna cause damage,to the disc or the drive,which
    you dont, maybe you should just not be here....

    ___________________________________________
    there are still users out there that never do nothing..
    errr....encoding directly from DVD-ROM like that can cause damage, since the dvd-rom will be used semi-continously for quite some time....

    the person was only asking a question....you shouldn't get so bitchy about it....there are plenty of methods for people to use if they're worried about damaging their dvd-rom or disc...i.e. rip to hdd first w/ smatripper, dvddecryptor, etc....
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