GD-Rom Dumping Guide (Old)

From Redump Wiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Reminder to check drive compatibility.)
(Introduction)
Line 6: Line 6:
==Introduction==
==Introduction==
-
This guide will help you dump Sega Dreamcast GD-ROMs. GD-ROM discs consist of two portions:  
+
Sega GD-ROM discs consist of two portions:  
* A low density area (the first 2 tracks, which are visible on ANY drive)
* A low density area (the first 2 tracks, which are visible on ANY drive)
Line 15: Line 15:
Very few drives are capable of reading the high-density area of a GD-ROM disc. A list of SUPPORTED or UNSUPPORTED drives are provided below, however the lists are still VERY incomplete. Please let us know if a drive should be added to either list! :)
Very few drives are capable of reading the high-density area of a GD-ROM disc. A list of SUPPORTED or UNSUPPORTED drives are provided below, however the lists are still VERY incomplete. Please let us know if a drive should be added to either list! :)
-
There are presently two known methods for dumping GD-ROMs. This guide will attempt to walk you through both.  
+
There are presently two known methods for dumping GD-ROMs. This guide will attempt to walk you through both.
-
 
+
==Method A==
==Method A==

Revision as of 06:22, 11 September 2013

Please verify that your drive can read GD-ROMs before you begin.


Contents

Introduction

Sega GD-ROM discs consist of two portions:

  • A low density area (the first 2 tracks, which are visible on ANY drive)
  • A high density area (the rest of the disc, which is ONLY visible on SELECT DRIVES).

It is possible to dump the high density area of a GD-ROM disc by using a technique called "hotswapping." Hotswapping essentially involves pressing the escape/eject button on the drive while in use to eject-and-switch-discs (i.e. "hot swap") so that the high density portion can be reached by the ripping software. The low density area (on the other hand) is visible on just about any drive, and can be dumped the normal way (without hotswapping). See the Main CD Dumping Guide for instructions on how to dump the low density area.

Very few drives are capable of reading the high-density area of a GD-ROM disc. A list of SUPPORTED or UNSUPPORTED drives are provided below, however the lists are still VERY incomplete. Please let us know if a drive should be added to either list! :)

There are presently two known methods for dumping GD-ROMs. This guide will attempt to walk you through both.

Method A

Software needed

Instructions

The high density area (sector 45000-549150) can be dumped as follows:

  1. Insert the audio trap disc (a disc with a hacked TOC of 99 mins audio, burn it with CloneCD or Alcohol).
  2. Use 'startstop.exe driveletter 1' to stop the drive motor.
  3. Use a pin to press the escape eject button, so the tray will eject (or remove the drive cover).. insert the gdrom and gently push the tray back (or put the drive cover back on).
  4. Now extract sector 44990 (to be sure that the offset doesn't cut off any data) - 549150 using CDRWin 'Select Sectors' with the following settings: CD Audio (2352), File Format INTEL, Error Recovery Abort, Audio Speed 1x, Read Retry Count 1.
  5. When it's done extracting, use 'ice.exe dumpfile.bin 45000' to descramble and split the dump data..

If everything went well, the dump is ready to be submitted.


Method B

COMING SOON!


Best Practices

  • Burn the Audio Trap Disc image to a CD-RW vs. a regular CD-R. CD-RWs are more durable, and are less prone to damage than a CD-R.


Troubleshooting

  • If you have a drive on the SUPPORTED list, and it doesn't work after some retries: (1) read ahead a bit (sector 60,000-x), (2) try/retry the normal range again, and (3) try removing the cover.
  • If you keep getting errors during the extraction OR if your drive fails to read the GD-ROM disc after swapping, then this most likely means that your drive isn't suitable for dumping GD-ROM discs. See the SUPPORTED/UNSUPPORTED lists below for more information.


Supported Drives

Drives that have been tested and verified as COMPATIBLE.

  • Lite-On LH-18A1H (themabus)
  • Lite-On SOHD-167T (iR0b0t, Jackal)
  • Plextor PX-W4824TA (pablogm123)
  • Samsung TSSTCorp SH-D162C (tossEAC)
  • Samsung TSSTCorp SH-D162D (iR0b0t, Jackal, tossEAC, r09, Rocknroms, nrl_quaker)


Reported Drives

Drives that have been reported as COMPATIBLE (unverified):

  • LG GCR-8522B
  • Lite-On LTD-165H
  • Lite-On SOHD-16P9S
  • NEC CDR-1901A
  • Plextor PX-708A
  • Plextor PX-755SA
  • Plextor PX-W4824TU
  • Samsung TSSTCorp TS-H192C
  • Samsung TSSTCorp TS-H352C
  • Samsung TSSTCorp TS-H353A
  • Samsung TSSTCorp TS-H353B


Unsupported Drives

Drives that have been verified as being INCOMPATIBLE:

  • ASUS CRW-5224A (axisleon)
  • ASUS DRW-24B1ST a (Enker)
  • LG BD-RE GGW-H20L (Teancum)
  • LG CED-8120B (iR0b0t)
  • LG GCC4482B (Enker)
  • LG GDR-8164B (iR0b0t, Rocknroms)
  • LG GSA-H10N (Enker)
  • LG GSA-H42L (iR0b0t)
  • Lite-On iHAS324-32 B (axisleon)
  • Lite-On iHBS112 2 (Enker)
  • Lite-On iHDP118 4 (Enker)
  • Pioneer DVR-103 (iR0b0t)
  • Pioneer DVD-129P (axisleon)
  • Pioneer DVR-111 (axisleon)
  • Pioneer DVR-216 (axisleon)
  • Plextor PX-116A (axisleon)
  • Plextor PX-760A (iR0b0t, Rocknroms, Jackal)
  • Toshiba SD-M1502 (iR0b0t)
  • SONY CRX140S (axisleon)
  • SONY CRX230E (nrl_quaker)
  • NEC ND-4550A (nrl_quaker)
  • TEAC CD-532S (axisleon)
  • Toshiba SD-M1502 (iR0b0t)
  • TSSTcorp SH-S202J (nrl_quaker)
  • HL-DT-ST BD-RE GGW-H20L (Teancum)


Forum

For any questions, suggestions or problems please visit the Dreamcast GD-ROM dumping topic in the forum. If you have anything to add to the dumping method or supported drives please share with us your findings.

Personal tools