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Can't find DVD Burner

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I ran into problems with my 1st attempt at backup using Acronis True
Image Home 2010.

Setup: I have Vista Ultimate on a Dell Optiplex 755 (Core Duo 2.33).
Software is on C:, user files on D:, and D:\Cedric is set as the
Documents folder, containing about 20 GB, in 300+ folders. I have a Benq
DW 1650 DVD DL burner in a 3.5” External Box, connected to the Optiplex
by a USB connection, and reporting as E:. This burner was bought for an
old machine with IDE connections, the Optiplex only has SATA, so the
burner won’t mount internally.

Task: I attempted to backup the D:\Cedric tree. Acronis failed to create
a backup to the DVD +R DL RWs in this burner, showing Error code:
0x00040003, but I might have had a faulty USB cable for this 1st attempt.
On the next attempt Acronis initially gave a successful burn message
after only about a minute of burning - asking if I wanted to burn another disk, but
an Error message also appeared in the screen bottom right, and Acronis
then reported "failed to backup file or folder xxxxxxx" and every time I
clicked ignore the next file appeared in this message. The log file is
attached.
I have previously tested this USB setup by burning 500MB to a blank CD,
Acronis has managed to do a backup to a hard disk in this External box,
and I have since burnt 900MB to a DVD -R by using Windows Explorer to
drag a directory tree to E:.

It has been suggested that "Acronis is likely using its own burning drivers, and not the ones Windows is using, so it's not seeing the drive as being a burner". Is this correct, and if so how do I show acronis the DVD burner?

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Cedric,
You will save yourself a great deal of pain and suffering if you do not attempt to create usable backups via a DVD burner. Use the optical device only to bootup using the Acronis Rescue CD.

A much safer choice with far less problems for the storage of your backups would be an external harddrive or about anything other than optical media. There have been far too many stories posted on the forum about non-usable backups stored on Cd or DVD. Plus, if the data to be written is large, you will be forever switching between discs.