How To Burn Ps3 Games To Bd Rebuilder

How To Burn Ps3 Games To Bd Rebuilder 3,6/5 8834votes

Elderlands Forums - I have burning ripping blu-ray questions. Elderlands Forums Username: Password: Save Password I have burning ripping blu-ray questions.

Author Topic Stygian Squire USA 264 Posts Posted -: 11:03:56 AM Just bought a new 64bit laptop, and put win 7 pro 64bit on it. I was absolutely clueless that there is now blu ray burners lmao. So of course the thought popped into my head as I rent Blu-ray movies from 'Red Box', and other sources as well as out-right buy blu-rays that maybe I could save a little money! (of course cough cough this is to just back up my copies in case they get scratched, lost or out-right broken cough cough) - lmao My laptop has USB 3.0 ports on it, and I am going to buy this external USB 3.0 burner. I work to much and make enough money to not care to hunt down software cracks and keygens, or hex edit the software and crack it myself olly32debug dissasembler.

How To Burn Ps3 Games To Bd Rebuilder

Blu-ray Copy. How to burn a Blu. A Blu-ray or AVCHD disc from files you have already created using converters like BD Rebuilder. Am burning on to a BD-RE. To burn a PS3 games, you first need to get imgBurn on your PC. This is the software which will allow you to copy the blu-ray discs that the PS3 games are burnt on.

Time is what I dont got, but money is not the issue. I'm willing looking to pay for some good blu-ray ripping and burning software. Any suggestions?

** 5 STAR QUESTIONS ** Blank BD disc come in 25gb, and 50gb sizes Most movies I want to rip to my computer may differ. Lets take a large movie like Avatar for example. I absolutely want the highest quality possible. So I'm willing to spend the 30$ per 3 50GB BD discs if necssary, BUT my question here about quality is. If you compress from BD50 disc to HDD, and then take the compressed HDD files, and burn to BD25GB is the quality harmed a great deal? Anyone have actual experience to answer this?

I am open to suggestions on any other things to think about, or to include into my buying process in which I should consider. I do appreciate those who make contributions to this post in effort to help me make the best decisions. Animal Crossing New Leaf Nds Free Download.

Thank you, -Cody aka MANEGARD Edited by - MANEGARD on 11:07:43 AM Stygian Squire Finland 316 Posts Posted -: 11:39:35 AM Well, I believe Nero is still the best burning software despite being pretty bloated. AnyDVD HD can remove copy protection from Blu-ray disc. I think Nero can rip being so bloated but you will have to test it, I have no experience. If you want to play Blu-ray discs on PC I suggest Arcsoft Totalmedia Theatre, I got it on my HTPC.

Faravid Stygian Squire USA 264 Posts Posted -: 2:39:22 PM quote: Originally posted by Faravid Well, I believe Nero is still the best burning software despite being pretty bloated. AnyDVD HD can remove copy protection from Blu-ray disc. I think Nero can rip being so bloated but you will have to test it, I have no experience. If you want to play Blu-ray discs on PC I suggest Arcsoft Totalmedia Theatre, I got it on my HTPC. Yeah from my research AnyDVD HD is the way to go for the ripping.

Then you have two routes. One for burning to 50gb disc, and one for compressing files to fit on 25gb BD discs. Rip with AnyDVD HD to hard drive(HDD) Say the ripped files are 45GB. Using BD Rebuilder you can shrink them to 25GB. So now you can burn the ripped movie to the less expensive blu-ray writable discs. Burning software of choice for everyone seems to be the good ole fashion ImgBurn software! My question is compressing them to fit on to a 25GB disc.

Does this lose quality a great deal, or very noticable? Difference is.

3 25GB BD disc cost like 7$ 3 50GB disc cost 35$ lol BIG DIFFERENCE! However I dont mind paying 35$ for 3 50GB disc under the pretense that most brand new blu-ray movies cost 30$ (or if your the scrupulus type. Not that I am.;) you can rent a latest release movies in blu-ray for $1.50 from RED BOX, and make a copy ) But I wouldnt do that. Thats not my style. Just like I'm nice and dont loot or kill other players. Lmao So the question is compression and quality!

I wonder if my Playstation 3 decompresses any of it, and upscales the quality?? Edited by - MANEGARD on 2:40:49 PM Stygian Patron 1017 Posts Posted -: 5:53:58 PM I can save you all the time you're spending and just say dl the rip. Physical media is pointless Edited by - Tramd on 5:54:18 PM Stygian Squire Finland 316 Posts Posted -: 07:10:45 AM quote: Originally posted by MANEGARD quote: Originally posted by Faravid Well, I believe Nero is still the best burning software despite being pretty bloated. AnyDVD HD can remove copy protection from Blu-ray disc.

I think Nero can rip being so bloated but you will have to test it, I have no experience. If you want to play Blu-ray discs on PC I suggest Arcsoft Totalmedia Theatre, I got it on my HTPC. Yeah from my research AnyDVD HD is the way to go for the ripping. Then you have two routes.

One for burning to 50gb disc, and one for compressing files to fit on 25gb BD discs. Rip with AnyDVD HD to hard drive(HDD) Say the ripped files are 45GB. Using BD Rebuilder you can shrink them to 25GB. So now you can burn the ripped movie to the less expensive blu-ray writable discs. Burning software of choice for everyone seems to be the good ole fashion ImgBurn software! My question is compressing them to fit on to a 25GB disc.

Does this lose quality a great deal, or very noticable? Difference is. 3 25GB BD disc cost like 7$ 3 50GB disc cost 35$ lol BIG DIFFERENCE! However I dont mind paying 35$ for 3 50GB disc under the pretense that most brand new blu-ray movies cost 30$ (or if your the scrupulus type. Not that I am.;) you can rent a latest release movies in blu-ray for $1.50 from RED BOX, and make a copy ) But I wouldnt do that. Thats not my style.

Just like I'm nice and dont loot or kill other players. Lmao So the question is compression and quality! I wonder if my Playstation 3 decompresses any of it, and upscales the quality?? I often rent the HD videos and watch with HTPC, 3.95€ for new movies here.

Faravid Stygian Squire USA 264 Posts Posted -: 07:21:51 AM quote: Originally posted by Tramd I can save you all the time you're spending and just say dl the rip. Physical media is pointless Tramd sounds excellent, but one major major problem which affects why I slowly am able to develop anything, and thats my connection to the internet. I live out in the country, and there is two choices out here in Texas where I live (I kill rattle snakes all the time to give you an idea lol). Satellite DSL ->Ping is absolutely horrible into the 1000msec 2. Cricket broadband wireless mobile air card Go to the directory containg BDMV, and CERTIFICATE. Burn BDMV, and CERTIFICATE.

They work perfectly, and quality of compressed blu-rays is practically un-noticable on my 240hz 1080p tv. I rate the blu-ray external writer by ASUS (model was listed above) with 5 stars. Note: This external blu-ray writer rips regular DVD's in less than 2 minutes for me, and burns them in about the same time! It burns blu-rays in minutes! I'm impressed.

Stygian Squire Finland 316 Posts Posted -: 1:05:10 PM quote: Originally posted by MANEGARD *** OK update on burning ** Everything is working absolutely great. I bought two blu-ray burners model ASUS BD-12D1S-U Turns out I do not need my second burner it didnt duel burn as fast as burning a single file. My laptop is blazing fast, with more ram than I will ever need, but I think the quad core A8 processor in it is doing its best when burning from just one burner. I think it's my slow arse 5200rpm HD. I need to hurry up and invest into an SSD, and then buy an external HDD to do back ups. This is my future purchase, and also 6GB of ram is nice, but I got room for 16GB of ram in this laptop.

I dont know yet if I want to upgrade to 16gb yet or not. I'm selling my second ASUS external burner for 135$ brand new in the box. The burning process went like this: Put in a blu-ray movie into the external ASUS blu-ray writer. Used AnyDVD HD ripper. Ripped files to my c: movies directory. IF directory and files that were ripped was larger than 25GB I used BD REBUILDER to rebuild the files in a compressed state, or in mode BD25 to fit on a 25GB Blank blu-ray disc. IF not compressed simply burn all files using ImgBurn -DONE If files have to compress it takes a while depending on computer speed.

For my laptop took about 2 hours for BD REBUILDER to compress the files. Once compressed BD REBUILT ->Go to the directory containg BDMV, and CERTIFICATE.

Burn BDMV, and CERTIFICATE. They work perfectly, and quality of compressed blu-rays is practically un-noticable on my 240hz 1080p tv. I rate the blu-ray external writer by ASUS (model was listed above) with 5 stars. Note: This external blu-ray writer rips regular DVD's in less than 2 minutes for me, and burns them in about the same time! It burns blu-rays in minutes! I'm impressed.

2 blu-ray burners? Pretty odd choice. I would understand if you copy alot (I built a 8 dvd drive copy machine to friend who is a professional videographer who needs to copy alot of dvds often). Anyways burning always require ALOT of processing power, even with just DVDs so AMD Fusion processor is not the best choice for performance. Faravid Stygian Squire USA 264 Posts Posted -: 3:16:46 PM quote: Originally posted by Faravid quote: Originally posted by MANEGARD *** OK update on burning ** Everything is working absolutely great. Dj Osso M2o Happy Edition. I bought two blu-ray burners model ASUS BD-12D1S-U Turns out I do not need my second burner it didnt duel burn as fast as burning a single file.

My laptop is blazing fast, with more ram than I will ever need, but I think the quad core A8 processor in it is doing its best when burning from just one burner. I think it's my slow arse 5200rpm HD. I need to hurry up and invest into an SSD, and then buy an external HDD to do back ups. This is my future purchase, and also 6GB of ram is nice, but I got room for 16GB of ram in this laptop. I dont know yet if I want to upgrade to 16gb yet or not. I'm selling my second ASUS external burner for 135$ brand new in the box.

The burning process went like this: Put in a blu-ray movie into the external ASUS blu-ray writer. Used AnyDVD HD ripper. Ripped files to my c: movies directory.

IF directory and files that were ripped was larger than 25GB I used BD REBUILDER to rebuild the files in a compressed state, or in mode BD25 to fit on a 25GB Blank blu-ray disc. IF not compressed simply burn all files using ImgBurn -DONE If files have to compress it takes a while depending on computer speed. For my laptop took about 2 hours for BD REBUILDER to compress the files.

Once compressed BD REBUILT ->Go to the directory containg BDMV, and CERTIFICATE. Burn BDMV, and CERTIFICATE. They work perfectly, and quality of compressed blu-rays is practically un-noticable on my 240hz 1080p tv. I rate the blu-ray external writer by ASUS (model was listed above) with 5 stars. Note: This external blu-ray writer rips regular DVD's in less than 2 minutes for me, and burns them in about the same time!

It burns blu-rays in minutes! I'm impressed. 2 blu-ray burners? Pretty odd choice. I would understand if you copy alot (I built a 8 dvd drive copy machine to friend who is a professional videographer who needs to copy alot of dvds often).

Anyways burning always require ALOT of processing power, even with just DVDs so AMD Fusion processor is not the best choice for performance. I understand and thats why I'm selling the second external blu-ray writer. My laptop is powerful to a degree, but is not by any means teh latest greatest. It's brand new, but not 'THE BEST' out there. I could slap 16gb of ram in it, but I dont know if that would make much difference. Burning that much data is allot of work on anything.

It's been fun though up till I got my first encounter with 'Cinavia' copy right protection via my PS3. Fawkin PS3's have a chip software to look out for Cinavia's newest copy right protection which is a real bugger. I ripped a copy of Battle Los Angeles and encountered this Cinavia.

However if you run the ripped copy on a none cinavia suppport device such as when I simply play my movie through my ASUS blu-ray writer using PowerDVD it works fine with no problems. The fear is that this Cinavia protection will eventually get chips installed into the televisions built in system. Right now I'm considering putting this blu-ray writer on sale for 135$ via ebay. Topic Jump To: Elderlands Forums © Asylumsoft, LLC.