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eEB020BBC error burning dvd
Scott61 [Avatar]
Member Location: Wichita, KS Joined: Aug 20, 2011 04:43 Messages: 126 Offline
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I have attached the actual error message. I have the latest build installed on the computer. I am using a DVD+R DL disc but I don't know what "layer jump address not complete" means. I am in a hurry to finish this project for someone and got hit with this. Please help.

Thanks.
[Thumb - error.JPG]
 Filename
error.JPG
[Disk]
 Description
error message received
 Filesize
81 Kbytes
 Downloaded:
67 time(s)
Scott Wright
Wichita, KS
Carl312
Senior Contributor Location: Texas, USA Joined: Mar 16, 2010 20:11 Messages: 9090 Offline
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Quote: I have attached the actual error message. I have the latest build installed on the computer. I am using a DVD+R DL disc but I don't know what "layer jump address not complete" means. I am in a hurry to finish this project for someone and got hit with this. Please help.

Thanks.

Do you have DVD (8.5 GB) selected in 2D Disk of the Create Disk Module?



[Thumb - 2D disk DVD 8.5GB.png]
 Filename
2D disk DVD 8.5GB.png
[Disk]
 Description
DL Disk Selection
 Filesize
71 Kbytes
 Downloaded:
156 time(s)

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Aug 09. 2014 16:20

Carl312: Windows 10 64-bit 8 GB RAM,AMD Phenom II X4 965 3.4 GHz,ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB,240GB SSD,two 1TB HDs.

Scott61 [Avatar]
Member Location: Wichita, KS Joined: Aug 20, 2011 04:43 Messages: 126 Offline
[Post New]
Thanks Carl for quick response. I do have 8.5 selected. If I don't I get a message right when I try to burn that there is not enough room on the disk. But I do have it selected.

I am transferring 8mm reel to reel using my canon vixia HG20 camcorder. I capture the images using 30fps and output at 4.3 with a lower resolution of around 420x? but not sure without looking. I am wondering what would give the best quality overall. To produce it as an MP4 at 2048x1536 at 30, or another setting. Would that be better than just directly burning to DVD as I am in this case? Of course any improvements I make increases rendering time. So I try to limit my use of video enhancement, denoise, etc if I can.

So, besides resolving the immediate issue I'd like advice on best option to produce the product.

Thnaks. Scott Wright
Wichita, KS
Carl312
Senior Contributor Location: Texas, USA Joined: Mar 16, 2010 20:11 Messages: 9090 Offline
[Post New]
Quote: Thanks Carl for quick response. I do have 8.5 selected. If I don't I get a message right when I try to burn that there is not enough room on the disk. But I do have it selected.

I am transferring 8mm reel to reel using my canon vixia HG20 camcorder. I capture the images using 30fps and output at 4.3 with a lower resolution of around 420x? but not sure without looking. I am wondering what would give the best quality overall. To produce it as an MP4 at 2048x1536 at 30, or another setting. Would that be better than just directly burning to DVD as I am in this case? Of course any improvements I make increases rendering time. So I try to limit my use of video enhancement, denoise, etc if I can.

So, besides resolving the immediate issue I'd like advice on best option to produce the product.

Thnaks.

I do not recommend lowering the resolution to fit on a DL DVD, What you should do is reduce the length of the video to less than about 2 Hours. Get mean with the editing. Not many people want to sit through 2 hours of Film anyway. You can also make Part one and Part two Disks.

Fact is that is all a DL DVD can hold without losing quality. Sounds like you have already loss quality by fitting HD material on a SD DVD.

If you have to produce Disks, Bluray disks are the best quality (Full HD) Quad HD is coming I hear.

MP4 at 2048x1536 at 30 as file to play on the computer would be the best quality, I don't know what TV you would play them on.

2K TV sets are still pretty expensive, 4K TVs are easier to get. 1920x1080 (HD TVs) are everywhere.

Carl312: Windows 10 64-bit 8 GB RAM,AMD Phenom II X4 965 3.4 GHz,ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB,240GB SSD,two 1TB HDs.

Scott61 [Avatar]
Member Location: Wichita, KS Joined: Aug 20, 2011 04:43 Messages: 126 Offline
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I have over 7 hours of family film footage covering twenty some years. I already am trying to burn them to four separate DVD's. I may look at reducing each to an hour and thirty minutes per DVD. That would only add one extra to burn.

I have no idea what type TV will be used as I am making a few copies for different family members that all have different TV's. I thought someone here once recommended to output at 480 and 4.3 for this type of work. I may have misunderstood the suggestion. I understand the 4.3 ratio and that has worked better for editing, etc.

I am going to transfer the same video to my computer at 1080 and see what the difference is.

Regarding the burning to dvd, any ideas? What is meaning of the error number?

Thanks for the help.

Scott Wright
Wichita, KS
Carl312
Senior Contributor Location: Texas, USA Joined: Mar 16, 2010 20:11 Messages: 9090 Offline
[Post New]
Quote: I have over 7 hours of family film footage covering twenty some years. I already am trying to burn them to four separate DVD's. I may look at reducing each to an hour and thirty minutes per DVD. That would only add one extra to burn.

I have no idea what type TV will be used as I am making a few copies for different family members that all have different TV's. I thought someone here once recommended to output at 480 and 4.3 for this type of work. I may have misunderstood the suggestion. I understand the 4.3 ratio and that has worked better for editing, etc.

4:3 may be the best format, because I seem to remember most film formats in the olden days was 4:3.
Film is an interesting media, because you can digitize film in pretty high resolution if you have the right Digital conversation. What you have is very dependent on what equipment was used to transfer from film to Digital Video.


I am going to transfer the same video to my computer at 1080 and see what the difference is.

Regarding the burning to dvd, any ideas? What is meaning of the error number?

Thanks for the help.

Those error numbers are very often a mystery to everybody except the programmer that put them in the Program.

Mostly we guess what they mean by what caused the error.
I think you may have answered that question when you said your were trying to put too much on a DVD DL disk. (Maybe the error is Disk Full).

If you reduce the amount of Video you are tying to Burn to the Disk, and you do not get the error, that is as good an answer as any.

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at Aug 10. 2014 09:44

Carl312: Windows 10 64-bit 8 GB RAM,AMD Phenom II X4 965 3.4 GHz,ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB,240GB SSD,two 1TB HDs.

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