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#1 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I tried to watch The Flash Season 7 Part 1 disc but it wouldn't go to the Blu-ray menu on my portable Blu-ray Player and wouldn't give any menu options on my brother's Blu-ray Player.
My brother took the disc out and noticed it was scratched, and other discs are playing fine from the same box set. I don't want to mess about repairing the disc to get rid of the scratches, I just want to force it to work. I've only played it once, so it should do as I want. How do I force the scratched disc to play? I'll even take suggestions that could potentially cause further damage to the disc, or damage to the Blu-ray Player, as long as it gets that one disc to play. I'll just do without a Blu-ray Player, so long as I can get the disc to do my bidding until I get to the end of each episode on that disc. |
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#2 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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The best way to test if the disc should theoretically play would be on a computer drive, and run a CRC scan of the disc. If the scan turns up any bad sectors, the disc is probably FUBAR.
If it's scratched and the disc will still load up, then it should play...at least until it encounters a data block error on the disc caused by any deep scratches. Then it will probably either skip around or lock up the disc. You can't really fix it if the data layer has already been compromised. You can try to wipe it down with a damp microfiber cloth or lens cloth (and maybe something like Windex, etc.) and see if it improves the surface imperfections any. |
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#3 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I don't want to have to mess around fixing it. I want a way to force it to do what I want, regardless of what damage it might do to the player or disc. |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#5 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#6 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#10 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I don't think Blu-ray discs can be resurfaced like DVDs/CDs due to the protective coating on the disc. I have never been able to successfully "repair" a scratched Blu-ray disc. Like Katatonia mentioned your best bet is to use a PC to verify the disc for damaged sectors to see if it can be salvaged. Sometimes using a different player can yield results. For example, my Panasonic is extremely sensitive to scratches but I can play through the same disc with zero issues on my Xbox One.
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#11 |
Blu-ray Champion
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You could try holding the playing surface under the faucet with hot water, put a little liquid dish soap on it, wipe it from center hole to outer edge working your way around the entire playing surface a few times, then hold back under hot water and keep wiping from center hole to outer edge working your way around the entire playing surface until all of the soap is gone, then wipe with a dry lint free cloth. I've tried this before and have gotten several problematic scratched discs to work.
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#12 | ||
Blu-ray Count
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Thanks given by: | frogmort (12-04-2024) |
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#13 |
Blu-ray Champion
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