![]() In my experience the disc will run out of room during the burning process far sooner than a CD player would reach the end of its servo and refuse to play any further.Ĭlick to expand.I recall reading in the mid-late 1980s in CD Review magazine in their "random notes" section that supposedly Windham Hill Records had an in house compilation CD that clocked in close to 100 minutes, IIRC. There's more danger in damaging your burner while attempting to burn a long CD-R than there is damaging a CD player when playing back a long CD-R. I've heard of people burning up to 90 minutes using certain CD-R's on certain drives, but I for one don't see how that's possible. ![]() Mine is set to 81 minutes - I don't think I'd go any farther than that. You can set a limit manually in Nero's settings - there is a tab where you can enable overburn, but prevent the drive from writing any further than a specified time range. My suggestion is to use it sparingly, in extreme cases only. The amount of overburn possible is heavily dependent on both the drive and the type of media used. I ruined an LG drive when I tried to overburn longer than 82 minutes. ![]() ![]() It doesn't take long to damage a drive if it doesn't support overburn. The danger with overburn is that you're always wanting to burn a little farther, just to see how much extra data you can squeeze onto a CD-R. ![]()
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