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View Full Version : Problem with burn image of UD.Dat in bdcmf


q_sali
6th May 2013, 19:56
Hi
I authored a 3d bd in scenarist BD 5.7 and burned UD.Dat image file into BD-R.I tested in sony player and it worked perfect. Unfortunetly I send my BDCMF to stamper maker.they inform me that my stamper is ready and them have sent to me .I think I recieve it in one or two days in future.today I tested my burned image in another player (Pioneer bd140).wow I became very very confused when i see my movie.It play with Interrupt sequentially.Now I want know may my replication BD play as burned BD-r ,or there is different between them.
I am really very very Confused .Please Help me......
thank to all

24673583
8th May 2013, 07:35
Here is an idea- contact Rovie support. Both products are pro products with full support.

rik1138
8th May 2013, 07:55
Heh, are you not aware that Rovi has dropped all support of Scenarist BD (and SD I think). It's an end-of-life product as of Jan 1, 2013. It's no longer available for sale, and I don't think live tech support even exists anymore... Since they were selling it until Dec 31st, they may keep a support staff on for a year, but you can't renew your service contracts anymore...

And, any of these products only have support for one year unless you want to shell out $5000 every year for the support, which many people didn't do even when it was an option....

As for the original problem, I'm not sure as I haven't done a lot of 3D work, but just from years of experience making DVD/HD DVD/Blu-ray discs, I can give you one very important piece of advice:
Before going to final replication on ANY project, test it in _multiple_ players. If it's 3D, test it in multiple players on multiple TVs... Some players/TVs are smart enough to auto-correct something that might actually be a mistake on the disc. You want to try in as many configurations as possible.
Buy a couple of 3D TVs and a couple of 3D capable players, test your disc in _all_ of the players plugged into _all_ of the TVs, just to make sure. Sounds like you are already about to get a replicated check disc, so I'd test that everywhere you can before approving the disc for the full replication run...

Taking a guess, I'd bet the final disc will do exactly what the BD-R does...

Also, running the image through a Blu-ray verifier is also a good idea, that will tell you if there's any spec-compliance issues with your disc. They are extremely thorough and well worth having. Sony makes one, and I think Panasonic makes one.