Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
Civic, there are linked articles and other links within those mentioned in that topic. If you dig down through it I'm sure you'll find information which will lead to the resolution of your problem.
Experience tells me that when problems such as yours arise, there has been more than one instance of CD burning software installed, and the problem is created by the reultant conflicts and corruption in the OS.
Quite frankly, the most straightforward and sure way to resolve it is to start over and install clean again. If you'd like to avoid doing so, then weeding your way down through all the links and sites the link above leads to will contain your particular solution somewhere.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
maybe if you were to display a bit more maturity and at least attempt to speak normal, syntactically correct English, you'd be able to understand better what others try to communicate to you (plus those others would better understand what you try to communicate to them).
Just playing dumb isn't going to help you...
jwenting
duckman
8,392 posts since Nov 2004
Reputation Points: 1,662
Solved Threads: 337
Have you tried uninstalling all burning software, ythen uninstalling the drive?
Have you tried the rep[air tool?
Have you tried the registry tweaks which change the setting for the drive?
Those and others are techniques within the articles I linked earlier. There is a wealthof information there to work through. Your problem won't have a single unique cause. CD burner problems are common, and can result from a number of causes.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
civic, ever considered that there just ISN'T a straight 4 word answer?
The links to articles I provided, and the other linked articles nested down in them, collectively contain just about every known technique for correcting problems with CD/DVD/Burner optical drives. There are a vast number of causes of such problems, and about 99.95% of them are software related. The other instances are hardware failure, and that's a lot rarer than people think it is.
If reading through all of it, and trying the techniques mentioned, doesn't work for you then back up your data files to another machine, format, and install Windows and your programs cleanly again. THAT'LL fix it.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
EVERYONE can back up data files so long as the files still exist on the drive and that the hard drive still works.
Sometimes, you simply gotta remove the hard drive from the computer, put it in someone else's machine as a second drive, and copy your data across from there. If you don't have any friends with a working PC, then you might just be stuck with having to pay someone to do it.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
Um, in the future it would be better to obey the rules and make a new thread instead of hijacking other peoples posts from like 2005;)
jbennet
Moderator
18,523 posts since Apr 2005
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