CloneDVD: Quick Guide to Backing Up Your Movies
What CloneDVD does
- Purpose: Copies and compresses DVD-Video discs to writable DVDs or hard drive folders while preserving video quality.
- Common uses: Full-backup of discs, removing unwanted extras, creating single‑layer copies of dual‑layer DVDs.
Requirements
- A Windows PC (compatible version depends on software release)
- A DVD drive (reader) and optionally a DVD burner
- Sufficient free disk space (≥8–9 GB for single dual‑layer DVD image)
- Copy of CloneDVD installer and any required companion tools (e.g., AnyDVD for CSS removal)
Step-by-step backup (typical workflow)
- Insert source DVD into your DVD drive.
- Launch CloneDVD.
- Select source (physical disc or VIDEO_TS folder).
- Choose backup mode:
- Full disc — keeps menus, extras, multiple audio/subtitle tracks.
- Main movie — keeps only the feature film (smaller output).
- Set target:
- Burn to disc — choose burner and output size (DVD‑5 or DVD‑9).
- Save to folder/ISO — pick destination path and filename.
- Configure compression/quality if shrinking DVD‑9 to DVD‑5 (monitor quality slider).
- Start the process and wait — duration varies with disc size, drive speed, and whether burning.
- Verify output (play ISO/folder or test the burned disc).
Tips for best results
- Use a fresh blank DVD for burning to avoid write errors.
- If the source is copy‑protected, pair CloneDVD with a decrypter like AnyDVD (check legality in your jurisdiction).
- Set quality to retain main audio track if space is limited.
- Update software/drivers for better compatibility with newer discs.
Troubleshooting common issues
- DVD not recognized: try another drive or clean the disc; confirm region settings.
- Burn failures: lower burn speed, use high-quality media, update firmware.
- Poor quality after compression: reduce extras removed and increase quality setting; consider using dual‑layer media.
Legal note
Back up only discs you own and only where local law permits creating personal backup copies.
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