11
I have a DVD that I want to burn, but it's one of those huge dual layer ones. I'm wondering, before I attempt the burn process, if I need a special DVD burner in my PC to make this work properly.
Thanks.
11
I have a DVD that I want to burn, but it's one of those huge dual layer ones. I'm wondering, before I attempt the burn process, if I need a special DVD burner in my PC to make this work properly.
Thanks.
12
You can install the freely available "VSO Inspector" software to determine whether your burner is capable of burning Dual-Layer DVDs from this link.
9
In order to burn a Dual-Layer DVD, your burner has to be able to adjust the optical laser used to write data to the disk in a way that allows it to bypass the first writeable layer and write data to the second layer. Dual-Layer DVD's have two writeable layers, and on any dual-layer capable drive I have ever seen, it's labeled as capable of writing Dual-Layer discs.
Look for something like this on your drive:
DVD+/-RW DL
DVD-R/RW DL
DVD+R/RW DL
DVD+RW DL
DVD-RW DL
Although most newer drives are 'multi' drives capable of writing both plus (+) and minus (-) DVDR/RW's, older drives may only be able to read/write one format, either plus or minus. Also, notice the DL
on my list above. This stands for Dual-Layer.
If your drive has this DL
label, it is dual-layer capable. Make sure you buy the right type of disc if your drive can only read one type and not the other, this is a common mistake since CD-R's only have one format (any CD-R/RW works in a CD-R/RW drive, but DVD's have two (DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW).
7
You do. The drive has to be able to realign the write optics to focus on the second layer.
2Most modern DVD writers support dual-layer, but older ones might not. – sleske – 2010-07-19T10:15:16.017
Worked a treat. – Sam152 – 2010-07-26T12:26:30.737
This also works for bluray drives. – William – 2017-02-22T01:57:12.223