Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > GD-ROM


The GD-ROM (Gigabyte Disc Read Only Memory) is the optical media used by the Sega Dreamcast (as opposed to a standard compact disc). GD-ROMs have the capability of holding a maximum of 1 GB of data, rather than the standard 650-700 MB of a CD. Developed by Yamaha, the GD-ROM is a proprietary format which works by packing the pits on the disc closer together to store more data. Along with more storage, the GD-ROMs provide an extra level of copy protection as they cannot be reproduced using a standard CD-Writer.


Regions of a GD-ROM Disc

The are 3 distinct regions when you look at the data (reflective) side of a GD-ROM disc.

"Produced by or under license from SEGA Enterprises LTD"
"Trademark SEGA"

A normal CD-reader will only read the first inner track and will not read past the black area because according to the TOC read by the normal CD-reader there is no data there. With a modified firmware that looks for a second TOC in the high-density region it is possible to read data from the high-density region even on a normal CD-reader. One can also utilize a "swap-trick" by first letting the CD-reader read the TOC off a normal CD with a large track and then swap that disc with a GDROM in a way that avoids alerting the CD-reader that a new disc with a new TOC has been inserted. It is then be possible to read as much data from the high-density region as the TOC from the first disc indicates.

The details of the high-density region aren't really known, but most likely the pits are just packed tighter than normal but still within tolerance since there is no problem to get a standard CDROM to read data. Claims that SEGA dispensed with error correction as a way to increase the payload are not true. GDROMs use the same error correction as standard CDs but since data is packed tighter, scratches will affect more data and thus be more detrimental.

Sega

Read more »

Non User