It works perfectly for me. I have tried many freeware to copy my movies to DVD, but all needs a very long time. But DVDFab will zip through a movie and copy it to a DAT file which is a lot faster. It's great.
Check that all your electronics can be tightly connected. After double-check everything that you need to connect, you won’t need to afraid of coming across electronic shock or something.
Connect amplifier’s L and R cable to the output and input jacks on the DVD player.
Follow the above tutorial to connect CD Recorder to the amplifier too.
Connect your speaker to the amplifier. Don’t forget to insert a blank CD into the CD Recorder.
Set up your amplifier to play DVD music. Only press Record on the CD Recorder when the DVD starts playing what songs you want to record. Press stop when you finish recording.
Record Audio from an internet DVD video
Preparation your items nearby You need a computer, a blank CD-R or CD-W and an audio recorder tool.
You can find many audio recorders like Freecorder, Audacity, or Adobe Audition on the internet.
If you feel complicated when you try to record audio with one of them, you may learn to record audio off DVD with a streaming audio recorder, which supports stereo recording on your computer's Windows operating system. But if there is no sound coming out through your computer’s speakers, it can’t record.
Download and install audio recorder to your computer.
Play the DVD video on a website.
Click Record while you are hearing the soundtrack, which you intend to record.
Click the tools button on top of the interface. Select CD burner in the drop-down list. Just add the recorded files to burn them on you CDs.
Of course, you can repeat the process to record audio from movie, DVD, FLV, WMV, and so on.
Play the dulcet sound in your car, or you may just archive it, for permanent storage.
It rips to whatever you set the format to. You can either make a legal DVD to DVD± back up copy or make a legal DVD to .avi back up copy or a .mpg, .mkv, etc. etc. It all depends on what you want to do with your legal, single use, not for profit, "I own the original disk" back up copy. If you want to watch it on a netbook/computer/media bridge, choose .avi. Your format is dictated by what you will do with it.
If you choose to only rip the film, not the bonus materials or menus, it will save it to a single file. If you choose to rip multiple parts of the disk, each part will be a different file. Make sure your settings are set the way you want them. I can't remember what the default settings are, but I didn't like them so I had to go in and set them to .avi, divx, etc. etc. etc.