[QUOTE=sertua;20590]Greetings,
DVDFab has very slow ripping speeds when I rip a DVD with a copy protection (takes more or less the same time as the actual length of the movie). I tried a variety of DVDs old and young. I'm just ripping to ISO/folder structure without any conversion.
If the DVD has no copy protection, then a 2-hour movie will take less than 30 min to rip.
I looked at the forum, did some googling, and read this thread: . None of the solutions I tried (reset DMA, diabling pathplayer, etc.) improved the situation.
My laptop is quite new and well-maintained, with P8400, 100 GB+ free disk space, 4GB RAM etc.
Any idea? Thank you for your time.[/QUOTE]
Greetings, and welcome to the forum!
Unfortunately, you have two things not working in your favour...
1.) You're using a laptop...DVD ripping and writing is a hardware intensive operation - which means lots and lots of heat generated... laptops are not good at getting rid of heat - it takes them longer to finish an operation... the more hardware intensive the operation, the more the heat is generated, laptops can't get rid of the heat...
I think you see where I'm going with this part..
2.) You have a Matshita drive installed in your laptop... Fengtao refers to them as matshita drives...and for good reason... I think you've found his main reason.
Another small point..not critical here, but may be if you experience burning problems...the burn log you supplied has only the first few entries from the file, and of those, none are an actual burn log...the short 9-line entries are generated every time you start Fab...if you look further down the file, you'll find actual burn logs (much longer than you sent in).
One option from the thread you linked to in your post that might have helped you figure this one out...had you been able to try any of your DVDs on another system (by choice, a desktop with no Matshita drives installed), you might have found a much faster rip and burn scenario (I usually run 8-16 min for the rip, and 6-9 min. for the burn - total...under 30 min.) on a usual copy-protected session.
You could replace the drive in the laptop, which would certainly help, but i'm not sure how you'll get around the cooling situation for laptops... unless you invest in a desktop...
Hope this helps.
DC
:cool: