On Fri, 11 Mar 2022, Terry Cox-Joseph via cctalk wrote:
Dear Classic Computers Members,I am looking for
someone who had an
operating floppy disk drive that can read old 5-1/4" floppy disks from
the 1980s.I may also need someone to read hard, 3" floppies.?The disks
can be mailed and the info can be saved as text and sent via email or to
the Cloud.I would need a price estimate, as well. I live in
Virginia.
Thank you in advance.
Terry Joseph
You might want to include a little more information.
1) Are you trying to make machine readable images that are only for
storage and later duplication?
OR, do you want to be able to get use of the content of the FILES on them?
Your mention of "sent as text" implies that they are word processing
files, but 1980s word processors stored their text in files that are
incomprehensible to "modern" word processors. Current Microsoft Office
can no longer handle Wordstar, Electric Pencil, Scripsit, or WordPervert
files (or many hundreds of others).
2) Which of the [thousands] of disk formats are they?
You should clarify those two questions before you send the disks to
somebody who can't help you do what YOU want.
In the 1980s, there were several different formats of floppy disks.
Some estimates are as high as 2500 mutually incompatible formats of floppy
disks, most of which were 5.25".
IF those are floppy disks from a PC, then there are two common formats
("360k" and "1.2M"), out of six formats used by IBM, and a PC with a
"1.2M" drive can easily read five of those. With some special extra
software, it can also read the sixth one (IBM PCJX).
Hundreds of the non-PC 5.25" formats can be read on a PC with special
extra software.
There are some, such as Apple, NorthStar, Vector Graphic, Victor, Sirius,
that require special extra hardware AND software to read on a PC.
3" floppies were used by the Amstrad, in double sided, single sided, or
"flippy" formats. The second side of the "flippy" disks can be read
by
flipping it over in a single sided 3" drive, but will require special
hardware or software to get at if you only have the double sided 3" drive.
3" floppies were also used by Amdek, the most popular being [mutually
incompatible] Apple and Coco.
But, you are PROBABLY thinking about 3.5" floppies, rather than 3".
In which case, the PC used "720K" and "1.4M" (usually erroneously
called
"1.44M", which was NOT the correct capacity for any rational meaning of
MegaByte)
Apple used "400K"/"800K" (single and double sided), and
"1.4M".
Reading the Apple "1.4M" can be easily done on a PC with special extra
software.
Reading the Apple "400K"/"800K" on a PC requires special extra
hardware
AND special extra software.
Other than those most common ones, there are at least a hundred other
3.5" formats that will require special extra software, and a rare few,
such as the Tandy portable drive for model 100/200, etc. that require
special extra hardware.
Sorry, right now, I do not have convenient access to any of the hardware.
--
Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin at
xenosoft.com