Ripping a DVD that was recorded in VR format
Macbook Pro, Mac OS X (10.6.2)
Macbook Pro, Mac OS X (10.6.2)
Alley_Cat wrote:
I can remember archiving some discs to hard drive on an old Windows machine but can't remember what I used to do it.
Cindyjk wrote:
Thanks, capaho for your suggestion. But I thought that Toast was just a burning app. Does it also rip? I want to rip these DVDs so I can watch them on Apple TV. Copy protection is not a problem, since these are home-made disks I recorded myself.
Cindyjk wrote:
... as I said, it takes 3 times as long, and the filesize is about 2 times as large, as I normally get using Handbrake on my Mac. I had 30 minutes of video ending up being 1.3 GIGABYTES on the PC, so I want to get my Mac to do this, if possible.
I've made dozens of DVDs on a Phillips set-top DVD recorder, using DVD+R media. Now, I want to rip them (using Handbrake) so I can watch them on my Apple TV through iTunes. Problem is, Mac won't read the disk. Simply says "You've inserted a blank disk". Ignore or OK are my only choices. I believe the Phillips recorder used VR format. Yes, I finalized the discs when I made them.

Cindyjk wrote:
If I rip 30 mins of video on my Windows PC (using Wondershare), or on my Mac (using iSkySoft), it takes 3 times as long, and the file will be 1.3 GIG. Handbrake seems the only program that gives me reasonably-sized files, but Handbrake says the Video-TS folder that I can see in the Mac Finder view is "no valid format found".
I made a copy of my DVD VR disk (using DVD Fab) on my PC.

Ripping a DVD that was recorded in VR format