I think you need to add a plus (+) between 1.iso and 2.iso
[Howto] Dump wii or gamecube games with pc [No wii needed!]
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07-16-2014, 04:53 AM
(07-16-2014, 04:23 AM)Shonumi Wrote: I think you need to add a plus (+) between 1.iso and 2.iso That worked, but now Dolphin can't recognize the ISO :/
Lenovo G505s
Windows 8 8GB RAM AMD A10-5750M (2.5 GHz) AND Radeom HD 8650G 07-16-2014, 11:33 AM
Check the MD5 hash. It's likely that your ISO is corrupted. You should redump the game using CleanRip. At any rate, you really should try CleanRip with a good NTFS drive to avoid all of this piecing together
07-26-2014, 03:36 AM
Just bought a used but in good shape LG GH20NS15 off eBay for the purpose of ripping Wii and Gamecube games, but can't get it to work. Both RawDump 2.0 and 2.1 give me the "you may have a faulty drive" error, and Friidump says my drive isn't supported and fails the "retrieving disc seeds" task. I have tried with different discs and (in RawDump) both Dual Layer checked on and off. The drive otherwise works perfectly (reading/ripping CDs, etc.), so I'm not sure it's a dud. Does anyone have any advice? Is there something I haven't done or haven't done right?
07-26-2014, 08:40 AM
I've gotten similar errors, and the only way I was able to resolve them was to restart the PC and then immediately commence ripping as the first task after booting the PC. Friidump in particular seems to get confused if a rip fails and may crash immediately if you try again unless you restart first. I've also had RawDump rip a few percent of a disc and crash, and then restarting the PC and trying to rip the same disc again was successful. These programs work by exploiting firmware flaws in these specific drives, so they behave strangely at times. I've found that RawDump is both faster and more reliable: friidump is prone to crashing on scratched discs, and its resume function doesn't seem to work, so if it crashes, you have to start over from the beginning. Using the slower ripping methods increases reliability at the expense of timely ripping, but even method 1 can generate crashes.
07-26-2014, 09:17 AM
(07-26-2014, 08:40 AM)Aleron Ives Wrote: I've gotten similar errors, and the only way I was able to resolve them was to restart the PC and then immediately commence ripping as the first task after booting the PC. Friidump in particular seems to get confused if a rip fails and may crash immediately if you try again unless you restart first. I've also had RawDump rip a few percent of a disc and crash, and then restarting the PC and trying to rip the same disc again was successful. These programs work by exploiting firmware flaws in these specific drives, so they behave strangely at times. I've found that RawDump is both faster and more reliable: friidump is prone to crashing on scratched discs, and its resume function doesn't seem to work, so if it crashes, you have to start over from the beginning. Using the slower ripping methods increases reliability at the expense of timely ripping, but even method 1 can generate crashes. Thank you very much for your response. I have been trying various things like that, such as starting the rip process immediately after restarting the PC or while closing the disc drive, all in an effort to "trick" the drive into reading the disc. Unfortunately it's all been for naught. It's the same thing every time: after clicking Start Rip, RawDump freezes for about five seconds and I get the "you might have a faulty drive!" error. The words "Wii disc detected" are displayed after I get the error, but I can't even begin the ripping process. The words "Getting DVD Name" or something similar have appeared a couple times, but that's the farthest I've gotten. It's a bit confusing, because all sources say this drive works great. Maybe my drive has an incompatible firmware. Who knows? At this point, I'm willing to chalk this up to bad luck and just use the GH20NS15 as a backup DVD drive. If I can't figure it out by the end of the weekend, I might just bite the bullet and go with this: http://www.ebay.com/itm/150747233290?ssP...1436.l2649 . Does anyone have any experience with that product? 07-26-2014, 12:59 PM
I've read from a couple people that even the GDR-8082N can be problematic. I've done some research, and I think I'm just going to go the Homebrew Channel/CleanRip route, which looks pretty easy.
EDIT: Please excuse the double post. After the fact I realized I should have edited my last post. Apologies! 07-26-2014, 02:38 PM
I'm using the GDR-8082N, but I've only ripped GC discs. IIRC the dual layer option in RawDump doesn't work, so if you have a DL disc, you must use friidump. I also had trouble with friidump crashing under Windows 7, but when I tried it on XP, it worked. Perhaps the problem was that I didn't restart 7.
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08-16-2014, 01:04 PM
I purchased a supposedly supported drive online. I've attempted to rip/backup one of my Wii discs using a HL-DT-STDVD-ROM GDR8082N0L03, however I still get the error popup about having a faulty drive. Is there anything I can do to get this to work? I'm using rawdump 2.1 on a Windows 8.1 64-bit machine. Thoughts?
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