Dvd drive problems, Hard drive problems – Dell XPS M2010 (MXP061, Mid 2006) User Manual

Page 101

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Ensure that Microsoft Windows recognizes the drive —

Click the Start button and click My Computer. If the DVD drive is not listed, perform a full scan with your antivirus software to check for and remove viruses.
Viruses can sometimes prevent Windows from recognizing the drive.

 

Test the drive —

Insert another disc to eliminate the possibility that the original disc is defective.

 

Clean the disc —

See

Cleaning Your Computer

.

 

Cannot read or play disc —

If the disc is dirty, clean it with a non-abrasive cloth from the disc center hole to the outside. If the disc is scratched and warped,

do not insert it into the drive. If the disc is inserted upside down, remove and reinsert in the proper direction.

 

Check the cable connections

 

Check for hardware incompatibilities —

See

Resolving Software and Hardware Incompatibilities

.

 

Run the Dell Diagnostics —

See

Dell Diagnostics

.

 

DVD drive problems

 

Disk will not eject —

Press the eject button again. If problem continues, restart the system.

 

Problems writing to an optical drive

 

Close other programs —

The optical drive must receive a steady stream of data when writing. If the stream is interrupted, an error occurs. Try closing all

programs before you write to the drive.

 

Turn off Standby mode in Windows before writing to a CD, DVD, or BD —

See

Standby Mode

or search for the keyword standby in the Windows Help and

Support Center for information on power management modes.

 

Change the write speed to a slower rate —

See the help files for your CD, DVD, or BD creation software.

 

Ensure that the disc is loaded in the drive with the label facing up —

See

Playing Media

for proper insertion instructions.

 

Verify the type of disc being used —

CD-R, DVD+R, DVD-R, DVD+R DL, and BD-R discs cannot be rewritten.

 

Ensure that there is enough free space on the writable disc —

Do not burn a blank CD-R or CD-RW to its maximum capacity. The drive needs 1–2 MB of the

blank space to finalize the recording.

 

If you hear an unfamiliar scraping or grinding sound

l

 

Ensure that the sound is not caused by the program that is running.

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Ensure that the disk or disc is inserted properly.

 

Hard drive problems

NOTE:

High-speed DVD drive vibration is normal and may cause noise, which does not indicate a defect in the drive or the media.

NOTE:

Because of different regions worldwide and different disc formats, not all DVD titles work in all DVD drives.

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