Originally posted by: PreDatoR
I think you guys are taking the wrong approach. I'd be calling the software place wanting the cd replaced. After all its more than likely the cd's being defective and exploding. Then bitch and make them replace your drive. It isn't lite on's problem the cd blew apart.
Thing is, this CD, as well as many others I own, survived my Acer 50x CD-ROM drive, which I assume must spin faster than my 16x/40x DVD-ROM drive which blasted my Giants Citizen Kabuto disc1. The imperfections in the CD's don't have to be major - it could be a microscopic crack that is worsened by the spinning and vibration. Plus, I'd tend to think it up to the drive makers to be sure that their product won't destroy that which gives them reason to exist.
think it has to do with people switching cd's more often now. If i dont burn a cd, I can pretty much leave the same cd in there for a long time, as in a game cd. If i wanna burn, than i start swapping out cd's. But a cd in a bit off when your not paying atten, and it somehow jams, laser tries to move in, crushes cheap cd while spinning and shattering i guess. i dunno.
I doubt that - the CD that blew up in my drive had been there a few days. I wasn't even accessing the drive either - it just started to spin for whatever reason, then CRACK.
🙁
but backup copies don't tend to work write for some reason.. atleast for me.
CloneCD and ClonyXL. Done deal.
Hasn't worked for me. My copy of Giants disc1 gives a CRC error during the install. Any copies I try to make of Homeworld: Cataclysm are no good either - when the game starts up, it checks the disc for the copy protection, doesn't find it, and just goes right back to the desktop.
There are currently no warning lables about this I am aware of.
Yes, there are, and it's not good. I've seen new Sony 52x drives that say something to the effect of:
If a CD shatters in this drive, you weren't careful enough about checking for slight imperfections in the CD. A shattering CD may void your warranty.
So basically, as far as Sony's concerned, if a CD goes to pieces, and kills your drive in the process, go buy another Sony drive!:|
Come on, I've accidently put in a CD in my drives (crooked) before and they have NEVER "blown up" like that.
If you put it in crooked, the drive probably isn't able to spin it up at all. This shattering happens with properly inserted discs that have slight, often invisible imperfections, that cause the disc to go to pieces at high speeds. Plus, with the hundreds of tiny pieces you are describing,
Buz2b, it is very likely that this was another shattering CD. What speed was the drive in question?