Just grabbed an old revision WH16NS40, will I have any issues?
Posted: Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:00 am
Andrew here, thanks for clicking. Fair warning, you're going to get a short story along with a question so please bare with me.
As I mentioned in my title, I recently grabbed an old revision LG WH16NS40. I've always had an interest in ripping my physical media, and I can remember some of my first experiences with optical media (however deprecated it may be) were trying to copy movies onto the home PC so I could watch them without accidently damaging the discs. As I got older I started to worry less about damaging my discs, and more about the longevity of them. With the rise of streaming services and constant quality reduction I once again saw the need to bypass greedy corporate DRM.
Naturally I stumbled onto MakeMKV. With it's easy to understand UI and dead simple operation, I thought I had found a quick solution to my problem. After coaxing my old Dell XPS 420 BD-ROM drive to spin back to life, I was off to ripping some of my old DVDs (and a few blue-rays) with a combination of HandBrake and MakeMKV. However, this had all been too easy and I knew something had to give. Sadly that "give" was my old BD-ROM drive. Turns out my firmware is simply too old for most of my blue-rays (and certainly 4K UHD discs). So after looking at some information on Google and YouTube I decided on grabbing an older revision LG WH16NS40 from eBay.
However after finding some more info about staying away from older drives, I'm worried I might've made a bad purchase. The drive I purchased was manufactured in November of 2014, and has v1.00 of the firmware. I had read that this old firmware will allow my drive to read UHD discs with no modifications, but I've now found some other guides that tell me to stay away from them? I'm not sure which to believe. The drive is currently in the mail, so I haven't been able to test it yet.
My goal is to flash my WH16NS40 with a LibreDrive modified firmware, so I don't have to rely on only using MakeMKV and the auto LibreDrive injection thing. I believe my older firmware allows LibreDrive operation without flashing, but I'd rather have modified firmware. I purchased the LG drive because it was affordable and seemed like the best choice at the time. I don't need my UHD rips to finish in 45 minutes, nor do I need to rip a massive movie collection. I just need something that has the firmware support for UHD discs, and the reliability for occasional ripping.
Thanks for reading
-Andrew
As I mentioned in my title, I recently grabbed an old revision LG WH16NS40. I've always had an interest in ripping my physical media, and I can remember some of my first experiences with optical media (however deprecated it may be) were trying to copy movies onto the home PC so I could watch them without accidently damaging the discs. As I got older I started to worry less about damaging my discs, and more about the longevity of them. With the rise of streaming services and constant quality reduction I once again saw the need to bypass greedy corporate DRM.
Naturally I stumbled onto MakeMKV. With it's easy to understand UI and dead simple operation, I thought I had found a quick solution to my problem. After coaxing my old Dell XPS 420 BD-ROM drive to spin back to life, I was off to ripping some of my old DVDs (and a few blue-rays) with a combination of HandBrake and MakeMKV. However, this had all been too easy and I knew something had to give. Sadly that "give" was my old BD-ROM drive. Turns out my firmware is simply too old for most of my blue-rays (and certainly 4K UHD discs). So after looking at some information on Google and YouTube I decided on grabbing an older revision LG WH16NS40 from eBay.
However after finding some more info about staying away from older drives, I'm worried I might've made a bad purchase. The drive I purchased was manufactured in November of 2014, and has v1.00 of the firmware. I had read that this old firmware will allow my drive to read UHD discs with no modifications, but I've now found some other guides that tell me to stay away from them? I'm not sure which to believe. The drive is currently in the mail, so I haven't been able to test it yet.
My goal is to flash my WH16NS40 with a LibreDrive modified firmware, so I don't have to rely on only using MakeMKV and the auto LibreDrive injection thing. I believe my older firmware allows LibreDrive operation without flashing, but I'd rather have modified firmware. I purchased the LG drive because it was affordable and seemed like the best choice at the time. I don't need my UHD rips to finish in 45 minutes, nor do I need to rip a massive movie collection. I just need something that has the firmware support for UHD discs, and the reliability for occasional ripping.
Thanks for reading
-Andrew