How to read old non-finalized CDs

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Solution 1

IsoBuster, CDRoller, or CD Recovery Toolbox Free might be able to read the data back off of that disc. CD Recovery Toolbox Free is, well, freeware, but not as powerful as the other two. IsoBuster has free functionality and Pro functionality that requires registration. If you burned the disc as an open multi-session disc with Easy CD Creator, then the free functionality should be all you need. If you burned the disc with DirectCD, then you'd need the Pro version.

Both Easy CD Creator and DirectCD were Adaptec products.

Finally, there's Roxio's UDF Reader -- that may also allow you to read the disc. Roxio took over the development of Adaptec's CD/DVD burning software several years ago.

Solution 2

Old thread - but go to EBAY and buy a copy of Roxio Easy CD Creator 5 (or newer) starting around $5.99.

This SHOULD read the data in direct CD mode and allow you to finalize the CD for future use, but no guarantees.

Worked great for me!!

Otherwise CD recovery toolbox did not work for me. ISOBUSTER and CD ROLLER both read the disk but cost $39.99. I couldn't get ISOBUSTER to bend on the price, even though I only needed it for one old CD.

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Harsimranjit Singh
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Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • Harsimranjit Singh
    Harsimranjit Singh almost 2 years

    I have a CD that was started in a 'multi-session' format, about 10 years ago, using CD writing software that I no longer have, on hardware that is long gone. The disk has files on it that are otherwise unavailable, but my current setup doesn't understand the particular non-finalized format of the disk. Does anyone here know of any utilities that can read this sort of disk?

    the gory details: the disk was written with something called 'adaptec', that came pre-installed on what was probably a windows 95 or possibly windows 98 packard-bell, definitely pre-DVD era. I'm currently at windows XP SP3, but if someone says windows 7 can do it natively, that'll be a good excuse to upgrade.

    • Admin
      Admin about 14 years
      @T.J. Crowder: no, no I don't. But something like this might put it 'in the budget', if you know what I mean.
  • Naidim
    Naidim over 13 years
    +1 as I would have recommended IsoBuster as the tool to do it. I've been using it for a decade, and have not had the need to try anything else.
  • Shimmy Weitzhandler
    Shimmy Weitzhandler almost 8 years
    CD Recovery Toolbox doesn't seem to deal with sessions!