eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
Does anyone know of a hack that would give me control over my laptops optical drive. I want to be able to spin (at various speeds) and turn on and off the laser while the drive is open. Any Ideas? 4/7/2010 2:45:00 PM |
stevedude hello 4763 Posts user info edit post |
sub7 4/7/2010 2:47:01 PM |
eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
Oh I also forgot does anyone know off hand what the power output of a standard optical drive laser is? I can't seem to find that info... 4/7/2010 3:12:34 PM |
Noen All American 31346 Posts user info edit post |
You aren't going to be able to do this with OS level software. Drives only support eject functionality, and the laser cannot be turned on while the drive is open for safety and legal reasons.
If you want to do this, it's going to require hardware rework. 4/7/2010 4:16:32 PM |
Floyd New Recruit 10 Posts user info edit post |
Now don't be mean.4/7/2010 7:49:15 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "You aren't going to be able to do this with OS level software. Drives only support eject functionality, and the laser cannot be turned on while the drive is open for safety and legal reasons.
If you want to do this, it's going to require hardware rework." |
not necessarily
remember, you can reflash the drive's firmware from inside the OS 4/7/2010 8:28:10 PM |
eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
What about the ability to turn on the Drives motor and control the speed of rotation? Any software code recommendations? 4/7/2010 9:30:40 PM |
Noen All American 31346 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "you can reflash the drive's firmware" |
Which is not OS level software. And still a major, major bitch to do because I highly doubt the firmware controllers are even designed to handle this kind of stuff.
^Doubt it.4/7/2010 9:37:03 PM |
wwwebsurfer All American 10217 Posts user info edit post |
hmmm.... I think you'd be better off buying a drive from eBay, taking out the parts and running them through a DC powersupply to get their controls down. Same for the laser.
I can't see this working reliably without dissection of the drive. 4/7/2010 10:14:43 PM |
eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
@wwwebsurfer That is what I have been doing. However for what I'm trying to do I have to move up to the next level and use software... 4/8/2010 1:53:52 PM |
darkone (\/) (;,,,;) (\/) 11610 Posts user info edit post |
^ So build your own controller. 4/8/2010 2:08:49 PM |
eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
I'm trying to keep it fully integrated without having to rebuild or modify the drive. 4/8/2010 2:21:37 PM |
stuck flex All American 4566 Posts user info edit post |
I keep thinking of this
http://vimeo.com/1109226?pg=embed&sec=1109226 4/8/2010 2:23:24 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
^ I've seen many people do stuff similar to that, but that one is really good. 4/10/2010 9:13:15 PM |
eaglet382 New Recruit 47 Posts user info edit post |
Nor does it help me... So no one knows a single line of code that would just turn on an optical drive and spin it at full blast without taking the drive apart? 4/10/2010 9:46:25 PM |
moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
Maybe try disassembling a firmware update package for your drive? 4/10/2010 10:00:01 PM |
shanedidona All American 728 Posts user info edit post |
why do you want to do this? 4/11/2010 10:18:17 PM |
Master_Yoda All American 3626 Posts user info edit post |
^ Why wouldnt you want a controllable laser? 4/11/2010 10:29:46 PM |