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#1
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Okay, basically, I did what you said, I got ASPI 4.71.2, and I have the tracks in a folder, then I put EXTRACT.EXE in that folder, highlighted both tracks and drug them to EXTRACT.EXE. It gave the error message that extract.exe performed an illegal operation, and was going to be shut down. Happens every time I do that. What is LBA? (what does it stand for and what does it mean) and when you mean to specify the LBA (I'm assuming typing it in?) but how do I find it in the first place? Basically though, that's where I'm at.
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#2
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extract.exe is a DOS command, you can't just drag files onto it and run it like a Windows application. You must specify the filenames of both ISO tracks, followed by the LBA offset of the second track (as found on the GD-ROM disc) in a command prompt (DOS box).
LBA = logical block address = where a track starts on a disc. When extracting tracks from your GD-ROM disc, write down the LBA number that the ripping software gives you for the second ISO track (not the first). Then, in a DOS session, type: extract firstdatatrack.iso seconddatatrack.iso 123456 <-- example, of course. The extract command will then write all the files inside the ISO filesystem into your current folder. That's it! |
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