User Manual

Table Of Contents
WAVELAB
35 – 806 Troubleshooting
Day to day precautions for trouble free CD
writing
The most important thing to remember is that CD writing is a real-time op-
eration where a laser burns depressions into the surface of the CD. This
is done at a speed which cannot be slowed down or interrupted. Any in-
terruption will most likely be fatal, rendering the CD-R disk useless. For
these reasons you should make sure your system does not interrupt the
CD-R writing once it's under way. Read the following points:
Keep the CD-recorder on a vibration-free surface. Sudden “shocks” could cause
writing interruptions.
Do not read files directly from a CD, copy them to a fast hard disk first.
Do not read files over a network. Networks usually are far too slow for CD-R writing.
Turn off networking, at least for the hard disk drive from which you are reading,
since the CD writing may be interrupted by anyone trying to access this drive.
It is best to store the files on a hard disk partition that is 1 gigabyte in size, or
smaller (since this means the sectors will be 16kByte rather than 32kByte).
Do not read files from a hard disk with compression enabled!
It is highly recommended that you keep your hard disk(s) defragmented at all
times. Windows includes an application for this.
If you have multiple hard drives in your system, put the audio files on your fastest
drive! Also use a fast drive for WaveLab's “temp” files.
Turn off any screen savers, anti-virus, schedulers, animated icons and alarm or re-
minder programs that might interrupt the CD burning operation.
Make sure any fax reception or background e-mail software is disabled.
If you use the System Agent, make sure no activities are scheduled for the time
you write to the CD. Do no use the “When Idle” option in the System Agent.
Disable any System Monitoring programs.
If you use the CD-R unit as a CD-ROM reader, make sure you quit the Explorer
and close any “My Computer” windows before writing.
Stop audio playback in WaveLab before writing.