Troubleshooting a Non-Recognizing DVD-Writer: Possible Causes and Solutions

  • Thread starter mech-eng
  • Start date
In summary, the problem may be with the DVD-writer, or the machine may not be able to boot from a DVD or CD.
  • #1
mech-eng
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I have a bootable DVD and I have two different laptops. The DVD-writers of the two laptops seems fine but something strange happened today. One DVD-writer does not recognize the bootable DVD but other does. This shows that DVD isn't corrupted. What is the problem? Is the DVD-writer which cannot recognize the DVD broken down? How can I understand this?

Thanks
 
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  • #2
Did you google on the error you got? I’m sure others online have run into the same problem with the same computer.
 
  • #3
I have many times over the years experienced the same thing. Minor degradations in a CD/DVD can cause one reader to gag on it while another reader sees it just fine. I've even had cases where it was borderline and one reader would consistently read it OK but another would read it or not depending on whether or not it (the reader) was in a good mood.
 
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  • #4
jedishrfu said:
Did you google on the error you got? I’m sure others online have run into the same problem with the same computer.

But how can I search that error when there isn't any notification or error code?
 
  • #5
You have the make and model of the machine and you have what happened so formulate a search. It’s what we often do when someone asks a question like this and we don’t know the answer.

We often tell posters to try the search first and then try PF.
 
  • #6
You could try burning a second copy of the boot disk with the writer that does work.
Could be just not a very good DVD media, that sort of thing is not uncommon.
 
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  • #7
Apart from the DVD it can be also the reader itself. Even just some dust can make it do so that it reads/writes some DVDs, but not others (which are still OK in any other drive).
 
  • #8
Two possible reasons:
  • One laptop may not have the DVD before the HDD in the Boot Order
  • There may be a fingermark on the DVD. Polish it.
 
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  • #9
Svein said:
Two possible reasons:
  • One laptop may not have the DVD before the HDD in the Boot Order
  • There may be a fingermark on the DVD. Polish it.

I think laptop DVD drives are main part of the problem and they are not as fine as that of desktop's. I tried to burn some iso files with Microsoft's own tool but there has always been problem. I cannot burn any bit to DVDs. The DVDs' brand is Princo. 4.7 GB, 16x speed. There is problem with two laptop's dvd drives. What do you think about buying a usb-dvd drive?
 
  • #10
The usb ones are pretty reliable. I use one on a regular basis. I do get bad burns but they are attributed to CD and DVD defects or fingerprint smudges.

They sell dvd disk cleaning kits and dvd lens cleaner disks in case there’s dust on the lens.
 
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  • #11
A tip about buying a DVD drive. If you expect to do much writing to DVDs, beware. Many of them on the market will advertise high write speeds, maybe 48X, but will do that only for the first 30 seconds. They then fall back to a very slow write speed. If you want the faster speed, get a drive rated for 'Copy Duty.' They are typically available from manufacturers that make disk copying machines and cost only a few dollars more than the usual consumer stuff. Without any hard data to back it up, I suspect that the Entertainment folks (Hollywood) are now paying the DVD drive manufacturers to cripple the write speed, thereby reducing the supply of copied movies.

It took weeks, 5 rejected and returned drives, and much Internet searching to trace that down. Annoying.
 
  • #12
mech-eng said:
I have a bootable DVD and I have two different laptops. The DVD-writers of the two laptops seems fine but something strange happened today. One DVD-writer does not recognize the bootable DVD but other does. This shows that DVD isn't corrupted. What is the problem? Is the DVD-writer which cannot recognize the DVD broken down? How can I understand this?

Thanks
Maybe one machine is using UEFI in the BIOS and the other isn't. Have you verified that the machine in question can boot from some other bootable DVD or CD? Is the machine in question older than the one that is able to boot from the DVD? How is the DVD formatted?

If the DVD is a DVD+R type disc, try copying it to, or burning the .iso file to, a DVD-R disc.

You probably don't need to fully understand how the CD/DVD boot process works, at least not just to fix your problem, but if you're interested, here are some references:
https://wiki.osdev.org/ISO_9660
https://wiki.osdev.org/El-Torito
and a document with more scope:
https://fossies.org/linux/xorriso/doc/boot_sectors.txt
 
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  • #13
mech-eng said:
I have two different laptops.
Is the one that's giving you trouble significantly older than the other one? If so, that one's DVD reader may be suffering from age-related issues.

The desktop Power Mac that I've used at home for nearly ten years has become slower in ripping CDs, and cannot read some "pressed" CDs at all. However, a somewhat newer iMac, that was formerly in my office, has no trouble with this (yet).
 
  • #14
jtbell said:
Is the one that's giving you trouble significantly older than the other one? If so, that one's DVD reader may be suffering from age-related issues.
Even though they are almost at the same age, the older is better.
 
  • #15
Can the DVD be read after boot? If you let your OS boot, then put the disc in, does the OS see it? Does it mount?
 
  • #16
newjerseyrunner said:
Can the DVD be read after boot? If you let your OS boot, then put the disc in, does the OS see it? Does it mount?
I cannot work out the above. What does it mean by "Can the DVD be read after boot"? Do you mean I tried to boot with DVD or OS boot from HDD?

Thank you.
 
  • #17
mech-eng said:
I cannot work out the above. What does it mean by "Can the DVD be read after boot"? Do you mean I tried to boot with DVD or OS boot from HDD?

Thank you.
(I know I'm intercepting a question directed @newjerseyrunner and not at me in particular, but I just happen to be here within a few minutes of your posting.)

I think that "Can the DVD be read after boot?" means, if you boot the machine that can't boot from the DVD, from the hard drive, or from some other device, can the DVD, that you can't boot from on that machine, nevertheless be read on that machine?

To rephrase the question: after the machine fails to boot from the DVD, and it goes on to boot from the hard drive (or from some other device), can you at least still read the DVD, or is it the case that the DVD simply can't be read by that machine from that drive using the OS you normally run that machine with?

I suspect that the answer to that question is yes, which means probably not a general DVD read error, but an error more specifically related to trying to boot from that DVD.
 
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  • #18
sysprog said:
I think that "Can the DVD be read after boot?" means, if you boot the machine that can't boot from the DVD, from the hard drive, or from some other device, can the DVD, that you can't boot from on that machine, nevertheless be read on that machine?

I checked my posts but I didn't see I said "it doesn't boot from DVD" because it doesn't see or recognize the DVD even I didn't try to boot from that DVD.

sysprog said:
I suspect that the answer to that question is yes, which means probably not a general DVD read error, but an error more specifically related to trying to boot from that DVD.

It was more than a month but as far as remember it also doesn't write a windows setup on a blank dvd along with seeing/recognizing problem. This show I have a general DVD drive problem.

phinds said:
I have many times over the years experienced the same thing.

I think this is not a rare case for laptop DVD drives. I have used 3 different laptops of 2 brands and their DVD drives wasn't as fine as desktop systems. And there is a similar remark above by Phinds.

Thank you.
 
  • #19
mech-eng said:
I checked my posts but I didn't see I said "it doesn't boot from DVD" because it doesn't see or recognize the DVD even I didn't try to boot from that DVD.
Your starting post said "One DVD-writer does not recognize the bootable DVD but other does." -- the question asked by newjerseyrunner sought (presumably) to ascertain whether the problem was only in trying to boot or was in reading the DVD at all -- you have now clarified that -- apparently the drive is malfunctioning.
It was more than a month but as far as remember it also doesn't write a windows setup on a blank dvd along with seeing/recognizing problem. This show I have a general DVD drive problem.
Yes. That's consistent with a problem with the drive. Now that you've established that not only booting, but even ordinary reads from the drive, and also writes, are not working correctly, it's clear that the drive itself is the likely culprit. Given that you didn't say that the drive was silent or wouldn't eject, I suspect something in its optical subsystem.
I think this is not a rare case for laptop DVD drives. I have used 3 different laptops of 2 brands and their DVD drives wasn't as fine as desktop systems. And there is a similar remark above by Phinds.
I think you're right about that. I have a slim touch-screen machine that has an optical drive that became unreliable about a month after the warranty expired. None of my full-sized optical drives has ever failed. I think that the more failure-prone character of laptop optical drives is at least partly due to the compactness exigencies "crowding the specs".
Thank you.
(I think it's not too great a liberty to take for me to say on behalf of myself and the other respondents) -- glad we could be of assistance.

You can probably find a compatible replacement drive on ebay at a reasonable price. You've also been given the suggestion that you might try an external USB optical drive. That would work, but for booting, you'd probably have a slightly different boot device selection process than for an internal optical drive, and you might have to use some different BIOS Setup options.
 
  • #20
sysprog said:
Yes. That's consistent with a problem with the drive. Now that you've established that not only booting, but even ordinary reads from the drive, and also writes, are not working correctly, it's clear that the drive itself is the likely culprit. Given that you didn't say that the drive was silent or wouldn't eject, I suspect something in its optical subsystem.

Oddly I can watch 99 of DVD movies and other kind of DVDs work properly, maybe some with struggles. The problem mainly appears with that DVD and when writing a blank dvd. There is scratchy sound from the DVD when it trying to read it. This is one of the strange cases of electronic devices.
 
  • #21
mech-eng said:
Oddly I can watch 99 of DVD movies and other kind of DVDs work properly, maybe some with struggles. The problem mainly appears with that DVD and when writing a blank dvd. There is scratchy sound from the DVD when it trying to read it. This is one of the strange cases of electronic devices.
That re-introduces the question: can you, on the machine in question, at least read the DVD, e.g. with Windows Explorer, even though you can't on that machine boot from it? And another question: is there some other bootable DVD that the machine can boot from?

In general, intermittent problems may be harder to diagnose than are reliably repeatable problems, because they may sometimes not manifest when you're looking for them. From what you've said, it looks like you have a drive that is faulty. Some DVDs (including most movie DVDs) are experienceable as more fault-tolerant than software and bootable DVDs, because a few stray errors aren't always noticeable on a video playback, but any error might be critical for the functionality of a software DVD.
 
  • #22
sysprog said:
That re-introduces the question: can you, on the machine in question, at least read the DVD, e.g. with Windows Explorer, even though you can't on that machine boot from it?
I'm not on that machine but after a struggle with the dvd for one or a few minutes, it sees the dvd as blank. In the place of dvd symbol which is accessed by clicking on my computer. Do you mean this by windows explorer?

sysprog said:
And another question: is there some other bootable DVD that the machine can boot from?

I remember last year I tried to boot from DVD, it booted from dvd but it gave an error. When I searched that errror, the error was about deficive DVD. But I think, from now, I understand that it might be related to deficive DVD drive.
 
  • #23
mech-eng said:
I'm not on that machine but after a struggle with the dvd for one or a few minutes, it sees the dvd as blank.
That' strongly indicative of a hardware-related read error.
In the place of dvd symbol which is accessed by clicking on my computer. Do you mean this by windows explorer?
Yes.
I remember last year I tried to boot from DVD, it booted from dvd but it gave an error.
From that it appears to be the case that the drive was able to read part of the DVD at least partly successfully, and then either the disc was faulty, or the drive failed on part of a partly successful read, or failed on a subsequent read.

Given that you are able to play the majority of movies with the drive, and that you haven't said that there is a failure when trying to boot from other DVDs on that machine, and that the DVD works on another machine, I now suspect that the drive on the machine in question may be working correctly on fault-free media, but may be not as fault-tolerant as the drive on the machine on which the DVD works is.

Some drives, on encountering a read error, will try a different read strategy (e.g. different angle or speed or neighboring redundancy area), while others will only retry using the same or almost the same read strategy.
When I searched that errror, the error was about deficive DVD. But I think, from now, I understand that it might be related to deficive DVD drive.
It's not always possible for the diagnostic subroutines of an error-handling set of routines, which present the associated message, on encountering a faulty read, to discriminate between a disc fault and a drive fault.
 
  • #24
sysprog said:
that the DVD works on another machine,

I said in #1 that the other laptop's dvd drive can recognize it but I didn't try to boot the dvd in that laptop.
 
  • #25
mech-eng said:
I said in #1 that the other laptop's dvd drive can recognize it but I didn't try to boot the dvd in that laptop.
Should that be taken to mean that you haven't established that the DVD is definitely bootable at least on some machine? If you do mean that, please try booting from the DVD in question on another machine that you know can boot from DVDs. That would help to isolate the problem.
 

1. What are the common causes of a non-recognizing DVD-writer?

There are several potential causes for a DVD-writer not being recognized by a computer. These can include outdated firmware or drivers, physical connection issues, or a malfunctioning drive.

2. How can I check if my DVD-writer is properly connected?

You can check the physical connections of your DVD-writer by ensuring that the power cable is securely plugged in and that the data cable is properly connected to both the drive and the motherboard.

3. What should I do if my DVD-writer is not recognized by the computer?

If your DVD-writer is not being recognized by your computer, you can try updating the firmware or drivers, checking the physical connections, or trying the drive on another computer to see if the issue is with the drive itself.

4. Can software issues cause a DVD-writer to not be recognized?

Yes, software issues such as conflicts with other drivers or programs can also cause a DVD-writer to not be recognized. It is recommended to troubleshoot any potential software issues before assuming a hardware problem.

5. What steps should I take if none of the solutions work?

If none of the solutions work, it is possible that the DVD-writer itself is malfunctioning and may need to be replaced. It is also recommended to seek assistance from a professional or the manufacturer for further troubleshooting steps.

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