Damn ! So now I can't even be sure of any of my fdd's marked NG (since I
stupidly forgot they could be 720meg ones). Googling the model #s on old
drives is also pretty hazardous or unproductive given all the company fall-
outs. Kind of like sussing out old memory chips using chip #s or FCCs.
So, Check them out installed, and then check them out installed on another
computer. There's got to be a better way.
Lawrence
> Sure, if
you look just inside the dust flap on a 3.5" drive, and you see a
> switch {or optical sensor) on the right hand side, it's a 1.44Meg - that's
> the 1.44Meg sense switch to see if it has a HD disk in it. If the switching
On Thu, 29 Aug 2002, Tony Duell wrote:
Be very careful. Some early 3.5" drives
(including the 600 rpm
full-height Sony units) put the disk-detect sensor on the right. Well, it was
a logical place to put it, out of the way of the write-protect sensor, before
there were 1.44M disks. So a sensor on the right need not imply a 1.44M drive.
And some of the early 1.4M drives that IBM used had no 1.4M/730K sensor!
It would try both densities in read attempts, and you could
specify in software to write the lower density (for example:
FORMAT A: /T:80/N:9 ), but if you put in a 720K diskette and tried to
format, the drive would have no way to know that it was not a 1.4M.
Incidentally, such drives often won't work
_at all_ with 1.44M disks. The HD
hole lines up with the disk-detect sensor so the drive thinks there's no disk
inserted.
At least that way, it never misinterpreted a disk as the WRONG type.