On 01-22-20 07:23, Divarin wrote to All <=-
@VIA: VERT/MUTINY
Hey all. So I've heard that some DD (360kb) floppy drives won't read DD disks if they were formatted in a HD (1.2mb) floppy drive (using the /f:360 option)
This is true. The reason is because of the different widths of the tracks created by DD and HD drives. DD drived have 40 tracks, HD drives cram 80 tracks into the same space. If the disk has been used before, the residual information from the underlying DD track appears as "noise" to DD drives.
For the past year or so I've been selling bootable floppy disks on ebay (360kb, 720kb, 1.2mb and 1.44mb) and have checked with the people who bought 360kb disks to make sure they worked correctly. So far they
have. I also have a coworker with a compaq luggable computer with
360kb floppy drives and made him boot disks which he says works fine.
Geerally if the disk is formatted and written to with a DD drive, it should be fine.
A few weeks ago I picked up a 360kb drive but it has a strange quirk
that disks formatted and made bootable in that drive will only boot in that drive. This DD drive will also boot fine off of a DD disk
formatted in an HD drive.
Hmm, sounds like a head alignment issue.
My question is has anyone actually experienced a situation where DD
disks formatted in a HD drive will not boot and/or read in their DD
drive? If so can you let me know what type of drive it is (manufacturer/model #) or at least what computer it is in?
Yes, this was a very common issue. Not just formatted, but if written to by a HD drive at any stage.
I'm trying to work out if this is actually a problem and if so for what drives
It was pretty brand independent, from memory. I was studying at university at this time and frequently encountered this issue. Only way to avoid it was to ensure that DD disks were either written to only by a DD drive, or only used in a HD drive. Some PCs had a HD and a DD drive, which made it easy to copy disks and avoid the issue, or to use the DD drive for all writing operations.
Later, the transition to 3.5" floppies solved the problem altogether, because 4.5" disks don't have this issue (DD and HD both have 80 tracks, but a different number of sectors per track).
... Get too many irons in your fire and you'll put it out.
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