romanjamm
are you first copying a full 50gb back up to your hard drive then using that file to compress? Are you trying to compress the full BD to a 25gb or just the main movie?
romanjamm are you first copying a full 50gb back up to your hard drive then using that file to compress? Are you trying to compress the full BD to a 25gb or just the main movie?
Is the movie over 25GB and are you compressing from your drive???
If so, please do not compress from your drive
First save it to your HDD as BD50 "Main Movie" without compression.
Then open the hard drive folder and select BD25 to compress to another folder on your hard drive.
Use the "Write Data" mode of Fab to open this COMPRESSED folder and burn to a disk.
Doing it this way saves wear and tear on your optical drive and is also faster.
CBR929
Even if it's a little thing, do something for those who have need of help, something for which you get no pay but the privilege of doing it.
Tried to answer your question ... I appreciate the advice ... will try to do it the way you suggest, if I can figure it out. I'm not the most computer savy person.
All I know is that when the movie fits on one 25gb disk, dvdfab works just find in copying and writing the data. In other words, don't need to do anything else besides open the program and click.
Tried to answer your question ... I appreciate the advice ... will try to do it the way you suggest, if I can figure it out. I'm not the most computer savy person.
All I know is that when the movie fits on one 25gb disk, dvdfab works just find in copying and writing the data. In other words, don't need to do anything else besides open the program and click.
Hi romanjamm
Just take you time in doing what I suggested, it's not too hard to do it this way.
I understand but not all Blu-Ray movies will be like that, and your burner will thank you.
CBR929
Even if it's a little thing, do something for those who have need of help, something for which you get no pay but the privilege of doing it.
Is the movie over 25GB and are you compressing from your drive???
If so, please do not compress from your drive
First save it to your HDD as BD50 "Main Movie" without compression.
Then open the hard drive folder and select BD25 to compress to another folder on your hard drive.
Use the "Write Data" mode of Fab to open this COMPRESSED folder and burn to a disk.
Doing it this way saves wear and tear on your optical drive and is also faster.
CBR929
It would be great if there was some kind of tutorial which shows step by step how to do this!
I'd second this tutorial suggestion - I sort of figured things out by myself since, even though I'm an old guy, I'm reasonably computer literate.
As for compression time - depends on your system, i.e. processor and operating system. If you're running an old Dell XPS with a Pentium D 2.8GHz CPU and 2 GB RAM with WINXP, you're basically screwed. Any compression at all (done from one hard drive to another) takes in order of 4 hours. But who cares? It does work!
Have to admit though, I'm thinking of getting a Core I7 processor computer with a little more horsepower for both backups and other stuff; I already have a copy of WIN 7 sitting on a shelf I've never used.
There is an extensive tutorial on the DVDFab website.
*** From what I gather, this tutorial does not show how to copy to hard drive, compress and then burn to bd-r.***
It shows how to copy and burn through the dvdfab software only, which frankly only works about 40% of the time!
About half of the bd-rs I copy, compress and burn using the software not only take too long to finish, but MORE IMPORTANTLY they stutter and pause every 3 - 5 seconds rendering the copy you make useless!!!
I really am disappointed with this software for purposes of backing up Blu rays. The DVD copying portion seems to work great ... blu rays, as long as you don't mind having a 40% success rate works, but really is too frustrating to even bother.
Unfortunately I have already spent a considerable amount of money on Blu ray burners and players. I am to the point of trying to find something that works better. 40% is just NOT good enough!
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