My Christmas gift apparently arrived a few days late this year, because after endless searching on the web, reading that my particular DVD-RW drive can't be made region free I finally stumbled across a firmware download today which proved the opposite!
I'm on a 15" PowerBook G4 with a 1.67GHz processor and a Matshita UJ-846 Super-drive.
I assume the following instructions apply for other Macs as well, but I really can't confirm this (perhaps someone else can). I also have to add that I'm no authority on this issue. This is the first time I've made a DVD-drive region free, and I've picked up information on how to do this by reading bits here and there. I'm just putting it together here in an easy-to-understand way
First, a short explanation of how it all works:
When you first got your Mac and inserted a DVD, Apple's "DVD player" asked you to confirm that the drive be set to the DVD's region. You actually get to change regions with a region-locked (RPC-2) drive, but only for a limited number of times (5 I think). After that you're stuck with the region you last used.
What we're going to do is "unlock" the region locking mechanism of the drive. Apple's DVD player will still ask you to confirm a region-change whenever you insert a DVD with a different region than the drive is currently set to, and it will still count down the number of times this is possible, but.... you can at any time reset the number!
To put it simply; after changing the firmware, the drive will become an RPC-1 (region-free) drive, but the software and MacOS will still keep track of any region-changes. But fear not, with the help of a simple application you can reset this whenever you need. Think of it as a "maintenance" or "utility" tool ;-)
OK, now on with the actual procedure:
1) First, I checked the exact model of my drive by going to Apple's System profiler ("Apple menu" - "About this Mac" - "More info" -"Hardware" -"Disc burning"). On my machine it says:
MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-846
Firmware revision: FAAG
(I had prepared some nice screenshots to follow my posting, but unfortunately I couldn't find any way of inserting them inside the message itself, so I'm enclosing them as attachements below).
2) Knowing which drive I had I then visited this PowerBook page, and scrolled down to the list of firmware almost at the bottom of the page. I found my "UJ-846" drive there with RPC-1 (region-free) firmware!!!
Since my System profiler told me that I had an "FAAG" revision drive I downloaded the RPC-1 version of the "FAAG" firmware.
The same firmware is also available at the RPC-1 firmware forum website along with information.
3) Having downloaded the region-free RPC-1 "FAAG" firmware (a zip file) which I the unzipped, I carefully read the instructions that came with it.
NOTE: DO NOT skip that step! If you mess things up you can render your drive unusable!!! You basically have to ensure that nothing interrupts the firmware update process (i.e. the computer shutting down because of a low battery, a crash, some download congestion or whatever.
Read the docs that came with the firmware for more about this.
4) When you're ready to update the firmware, having double-checked everything (that you have the right firmware version, drive model etc.), double-click the updater.
Please note that the updater will start updating the drive right away. You won't get any sort of option to cancel, so ONLY double-click it when you're absolutely sure you want to update the drive.
(OK, I know I make the process sound very scary with all my warnings, but better that than people skipping through lots of important steps!).
5) The updater will update the firmware. For a while it will seem that the updater has frozen because nothing seems to happen.
Whatever you do, DO NOT FORCE-QUIT THE UPDATER!!!
Just leave it, don't touch anything. After a while (around a minute I guess, though I didn't time it -be patient!) the update will finish and you'll be asked to restart the computer. You're done!
Restart the computer before moving on to try it all out.
6) We're now going to check if the drive really is region-free. Download and install DVD-info X.
It should tell you that you now have an RFC-1 drive, which means it's region-free. If it says something else you haven't successfully updated the firmware for some reason.
7) You now need the "utility" software needed to reset the region-changing count for MacOS/DVD player.
Download Region X for this. I believe that's version 1.1.12 while 1.1.13 which is a universal binary can be found at the Powerbook page which I mentioned earlier (Go to the section named "For PowerBook & iBook G4 and MacBooks" right after the introduction. You'll find the links among the text under "Before you go further").
That's it!
I hope this has become a clear and easily understandable instruction for how to make a locked DVD drive region-free, and hopefully someone will post followups and comments.
It's great to truly have a portable computer the way it should be to begin with -being able to use it anywhere in the world, and watch any DVD you like!
PS: Yes, I do know about VideoLAN VLC player and its ability to play DVDs of different regions than the drive. But from what I've read this doesn't work with all versions of MacOS/Mac computers. It also uses a lot of CPU power for that "decoding" process or whatever it does, so that's no good thing when watching a DVD on your laptop when using the battery.
Besides, I find its user-interface a little cumbersome and "geeky". In my opinion a Mac should be super-easy to use, which is why Apple's own DVD-player is what I prefer.
I'm on a 15" PowerBook G4 with a 1.67GHz processor and a Matshita UJ-846 Super-drive.
I assume the following instructions apply for other Macs as well, but I really can't confirm this (perhaps someone else can). I also have to add that I'm no authority on this issue. This is the first time I've made a DVD-drive region free, and I've picked up information on how to do this by reading bits here and there. I'm just putting it together here in an easy-to-understand way
First, a short explanation of how it all works:
When you first got your Mac and inserted a DVD, Apple's "DVD player" asked you to confirm that the drive be set to the DVD's region. You actually get to change regions with a region-locked (RPC-2) drive, but only for a limited number of times (5 I think). After that you're stuck with the region you last used.
What we're going to do is "unlock" the region locking mechanism of the drive. Apple's DVD player will still ask you to confirm a region-change whenever you insert a DVD with a different region than the drive is currently set to, and it will still count down the number of times this is possible, but.... you can at any time reset the number!
To put it simply; after changing the firmware, the drive will become an RPC-1 (region-free) drive, but the software and MacOS will still keep track of any region-changes. But fear not, with the help of a simple application you can reset this whenever you need. Think of it as a "maintenance" or "utility" tool ;-)
OK, now on with the actual procedure:
1) First, I checked the exact model of my drive by going to Apple's System profiler ("Apple menu" - "About this Mac" - "More info" -"Hardware" -"Disc burning"). On my machine it says:
MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-846
Firmware revision: FAAG
(I had prepared some nice screenshots to follow my posting, but unfortunately I couldn't find any way of inserting them inside the message itself, so I'm enclosing them as attachements below).
2) Knowing which drive I had I then visited this PowerBook page, and scrolled down to the list of firmware almost at the bottom of the page. I found my "UJ-846" drive there with RPC-1 (region-free) firmware!!!
Since my System profiler told me that I had an "FAAG" revision drive I downloaded the RPC-1 version of the "FAAG" firmware.
The same firmware is also available at the RPC-1 firmware forum website along with information.
3) Having downloaded the region-free RPC-1 "FAAG" firmware (a zip file) which I the unzipped, I carefully read the instructions that came with it.
NOTE: DO NOT skip that step! If you mess things up you can render your drive unusable!!! You basically have to ensure that nothing interrupts the firmware update process (i.e. the computer shutting down because of a low battery, a crash, some download congestion or whatever.
Read the docs that came with the firmware for more about this.
4) When you're ready to update the firmware, having double-checked everything (that you have the right firmware version, drive model etc.), double-click the updater.
Please note that the updater will start updating the drive right away. You won't get any sort of option to cancel, so ONLY double-click it when you're absolutely sure you want to update the drive.
(OK, I know I make the process sound very scary with all my warnings, but better that than people skipping through lots of important steps!).
5) The updater will update the firmware. For a while it will seem that the updater has frozen because nothing seems to happen.
Whatever you do, DO NOT FORCE-QUIT THE UPDATER!!!
Just leave it, don't touch anything. After a while (around a minute I guess, though I didn't time it -be patient!) the update will finish and you'll be asked to restart the computer. You're done!
Restart the computer before moving on to try it all out.
6) We're now going to check if the drive really is region-free. Download and install DVD-info X.
It should tell you that you now have an RFC-1 drive, which means it's region-free. If it says something else you haven't successfully updated the firmware for some reason.
7) You now need the "utility" software needed to reset the region-changing count for MacOS/DVD player.
Download Region X for this. I believe that's version 1.1.12 while 1.1.13 which is a universal binary can be found at the Powerbook page which I mentioned earlier (Go to the section named "For PowerBook & iBook G4 and MacBooks" right after the introduction. You'll find the links among the text under "Before you go further").
That's it!
I hope this has become a clear and easily understandable instruction for how to make a locked DVD drive region-free, and hopefully someone will post followups and comments.
It's great to truly have a portable computer the way it should be to begin with -being able to use it anywhere in the world, and watch any DVD you like!
PS: Yes, I do know about VideoLAN VLC player and its ability to play DVDs of different regions than the drive. But from what I've read this doesn't work with all versions of MacOS/Mac computers. It also uses a lot of CPU power for that "decoding" process or whatever it does, so that's no good thing when watching a DVD on your laptop when using the battery.
Besides, I find its user-interface a little cumbersome and "geeky". In my opinion a Mac should be super-easy to use, which is why Apple's own DVD-player is what I prefer.
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