CD shattered inside drive

HauntFox

Member
Oct 3, 2001
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I had a cd that was cracking a little around the center hole, so I put it in my drive to make a copy of it. It spins up and I hear a loud snap followed by a grinding noise and small bits of plastic flying around inside. I quickly press eject and see parts of the cd in the tray in pieces. I had to take apart the drive to get the rest of the pieces out, there was a ton of them. The paper-thin ribbon cable that goes from the laser to the circuit board had a small cut in it, and after putting the drive back together, it wouldn't read anything anymore.

Moral of the story, don't ever put a cracked CD in a high speed drive, heh.
Good thing they're pretty cheap.
 

corkyg

Elite Member | Peripherals
Super Moderator
Mar 4, 2000
27,370
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Glad it worked out - this has happened many times on this forum - we keep re-learning the same lesson. :)
 

middlehead

Diamond Member
Jul 11, 2004
4,573
2
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I had one of those business card size CDs bust in a DVD drive a few years ago. Twas a recruitment disc from Yale, and the bastards wouldn't pay to replace the drive.
 

IEC

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jun 10, 2004
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Originally posted by: middlehead
I had one of those business card size CDs bust in a DVD drive a few years ago. Twas a recruitment disc from Yale, and the bastards wouldn't pay to replace the drive.

That's why you use a program to set the drive speed to 16X or 8X :D
 

Mrvile

Lifer
Oct 16, 2004
14,066
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:thumbsup:

Enjoy.

This was actually in Maximum PC once, in the Geek Quiz article. Good times.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
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Originally posted by: ariafrost
Originally posted by: middlehead
I had one of those business card size CDs bust in a DVD drive a few years ago. Twas a recruitment disc from Yale, and the bastards wouldn't pay to replace the drive.

That's why you use a program to set the drive speed to 16X or 8X :D

Heck with that, with a cracked disc, set it as slow as the drive will support. I have used EAC to save stuff off a cracked audio CD. Luckily, the disc wasn't badly damaged enough to shatter - EAC has the option to limit the ripping speed, but the drive still spins the disc up to full speed when it's first put in.
 

JDCentral

Senior member
Jul 14, 2004
372
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THis happened to my beloved UT CD (the first one... non GOTY version).

I think after installing and re-installing so many times, it just gave up..

*sigh*

What a great game...
 

middlehead

Diamond Member
Jul 11, 2004
4,573
2
81
Originally posted by: ariafrost
Originally posted by: middlehead
I had one of those business card size CDs bust in a DVD drive a few years ago. Twas a recruitment disc from Yale, and the bastards wouldn't pay to replace the drive.

That's why you use a program to set the drive speed to 16X or 8X :D

I didn't know the disc was cracked when I put it in, otherwise I wouldn't have :p
I did look at it when I took it out of the package to see if any crap was on it, so if it was cracked it had to be a hairline fracture.





Unless you just mean to turn down the speed on any mini-disc, which I've been doing since then.
 

jelifah

Senior member
Dec 6, 2004
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I'll never forget the first time I got the bright idea to break a CD in half. I'd just burned a coaster at work and was like 'Wouldn't it be fun to just crack it in half?' So I start applying the pressure to break it and notice it's taking a LOT more pressure than I expected.

The finally, and quite suddenly, the thing 'SHATTERS' in my hands, I think I even cut my hand a smidge. I was like 'uhh, whoa'