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bin/cue files... to dvd?!?

DrinkMaster

Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2004
Messages
29
Location
Liverpool
How do i write these as a movie dvd?

isobuster doesnt seem to do anything clever unless i'm doing it wrong.
 
Have u tried burning it with Nero?
 
Or Blindwrite, CloneCD...

Should be no problem...
 
CDRWin is another, but I always use Nero for cue & bin files :)
 
I use Nero as well.
 
Usually with Nero, you have to select the *.cue extension from the drop down list. Or so I've found.
 
cheers guys will be trying this when i'm on my laptop again.
 
wait guys it will only write as either super vdc or data dvd... how will this work as a movie disc or am i being stupid?
 
Ok then, just burn it to a cd... Obviously it is a SVCD already... Your DVD playa should manage that...

In case you haven't watched it yet and wanna do it on your PC, you can use the "video lan client" (http://www.videolan.org/) and simply drag and drop the .bin, will play it.

Or mount it with deamon tools (will act like a normal CD: http://www.daemon-tools.cc/dtcc/portal/portal.php)

Buba
 
cheers Buba. sorry for being lame. i'm learning this whole dvd creating thing.

nice one.
 
Generally you can tell by the size of the .bin file whether the .cue file needs burning to DVD or CD. Basically, if it's a lot bigger than 700MB, it'll be a DVD image, if not, then just a CD image.
 
and a lot is more then 200MB...
.bin images are usually bigger then the cd's they are to be burned on...
ive burned 900MB .bins onto 700MB cds.
 
That's because the failure check thingy on Svcds is less strict... Therefor more data can be written on it... Usually 800MB... You sure, bigfoot, you didn't use a 800 MB CDR? Or did you massivley overburn it?

You can also buy CDs that can store 900MB. But I don't think much of it. Most burners have to slow down massivley on outer the end of the CD because they don't feature overburn at high speeds... Or has this changed with DVD Writers?

Buba
 
Buba said:
That's because the failure check thingy on Svcds is less strict... Therefor more data can be written on it... Usually 800MB... You sure, bigfoot, you didn't use a 800 MB CDR? Or did you massivley overburn it?
100% sure i didnt overburn, and also 100% sure i didnt use 800MB disks.
 
yea, .bins are usually bigger than the CD they're been written to. I too have written over 800mb to a CD b4
 
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