On Apr 6, 2016, at 3:15 PM, JP Hindin <jplist2008
at kiwigeek.com> wrote:
I had one of those Japanese Koan moments recently when someone asked me "Why do
floppy disks stop working?" and I realised I... didn't actually know. I thought
I'd throw it to the group and get some theories/proofs.
Let's work on the assumption we're talking about 5.25" and 3.5" disks.
Several guesses:
- Repeated use slowly wears away the magnetic media layer on the mylar.
- When left in an unprotected state, or a poor environment, damp, mold and dust can
damage the surface, either degrading the magnetic layer or causing the gap to shrink
enough that the drive head physically damages the disk?
- Quantum fluctuations in the state of the universe, caused by millions of mostly
non-interacting particles passing through a disk in any given minute, alter the magnetic
spin of the ferric atoms causing gradual data loss over time (mostly tongue-in-cheek)
- Given the lack of use of most floppy drives they themselves pick up 'gunk' and
on first reading a diskette after a long time of disuse damage it.
It _seems_ like when you put a 3.5" disk down for ten years and pick it back up, a
disk that used to work fine no longer does. Of course, after ten years, it could be your
own memory that's failed.
Dare I ask, what's the consensus?
- JP
On a related note... What causes an old mfm / roll drive to die if the heads aren't
touching the surface except in the landing zone?
I have read that it's not impossible for the "pigment" to lose its
coercivity over time.