STM Posted February 14, 2007 Share Posted February 14, 2007 (edited) Hi, Does anybody know with wich progam or how you can burn a .ccd / .sub / .img file in OSX? I've looked everywere but can't find anything.. STM Edited February 15, 2007 by STM Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bonfire99 Posted May 11, 2008 Share Posted May 11, 2008 Also am wondering the same thing. I have a folder with 3 files .ccd, .img, .sub. When I burn just the image file, it doesn't allow me to boot the CD. Any ideas on how to overcome this. I would like to stick with using Toast or DiskUtility; however, if needs be, I would be willing to buy another program to do this. Thanks, B Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
curlyboy Posted May 11, 2008 Share Posted May 11, 2008 Not sure but arent they clone cd files or blindwrite files Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gh0stn1nja Posted June 7, 2009 Share Posted June 7, 2009 CloneCD files (.img+.sub+.ccd) can be made into regular .iso images with the MacPorts program "ccd2iso". http://www.macports.org/ after you have MacPorts installed, open the terminal and type: $sudo port install ccd2iso which will get all the required files and install the program. Then you can cd to the directory that your files are in and type: $ccd2iso name.img name.iso where "name" is the file name of your .img file. After that, you have a plain old ISO image that should work with Disk Utility. Cheers! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Team NES Posted February 10, 2010 Share Posted February 10, 2010 CloneCD files (.img+.sub+.ccd) can be made into regular .iso images with the MacPorts program "ccd2iso".http://www.macports.org/ after you have MacPorts installed, open the terminal and type: $sudo port install ccd2iso which will get all the required files and install the program. Then you can cd to the directory that your files are in and type: $ccd2iso name.img name.iso where "name" is the file name of your .img file. After that, you have a plain old ISO image that should work with Disk Utility. Cheers! I am a new member here, and I tried this method before registering here... successful. Thanks, gh0stn1nja. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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