This one seems to have information on the diskette layout starting on page
230:
-Peter
On Sun, Dec 8, 2024 at 4:52 PM Rik Bos via cctalk <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
wrote:
Tony,
Maybe this software catalogue will help you:
https://electrickery.nl/comp/p2000c/doc/PTC_Katalogus.pdf
-Rik
-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Tony Duell via cctalk <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Verzonden: zondag 8 december 2024 19:55
Aan: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <
cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
CC: Tony Duell <ard.p850ug1(a)gmail.com>
Onderwerp: [cctalk] Philips P2000C disk format
The quick version : Does anyone know the exact physical and logical disk
format used by CP/M on the Philips P2000C portable computer?
The long version with explanations :
I am having reasonable success transfering files to/from disk images for
my Osborne 1A (using cpmtools) and IBM5155 (MS-DOS, of course using
editdisk). And I've even got the Greaseweazle to transfer those images
to/from real floppies. The Greaseweazle still annoys me in that I know it's
capable of a lot more if only I could work out how to do it, but at least
it does something useful
[The less said about floppy disks shedding oxide and/or suffering from
'sticky shed' the better. I'm spending far too much time dismantling and
cleaning drives....]
Any, I'd like to do the same for another of my machines, a Philips P2000C
cp/m 'portable'. My machine is the version with 2 internal 40 cylinder
single head drives (about 160K each, MFM) but I can also plug in an
external 80 cylinder double head drive to handle this machine's other
native format (about 640K).
Unfortunately, this machine is not common, and neither cpmtools nor the
greaseweazle software has the formats predefined. I could add them myself
-- if I knew what they were. Things like #sectors/track, sector size,
#system tracks, skew, etc.
It's not obviously given in any of the manuals I have, so does anyone know
it before I try to work it out.
Alternatively there are rumours that the P2000C could read/write at least
one more common cp/m disk type. The hardware should be capable of it, sure.
Doe anyone know if software to do something like this exists anywhere for
the P2000C. I can't find it on any of the obvious sites
-tony