[Coco] So, does anyone know where to get disk drives?
Bill Pierce
ooogalapasooo at aol.com
Tue Sep 3 20:19:36 EDT 2013
Al,
Art Flexer released ADos to PD and it's in the archives
Bill Pierce
My Music from the Tandy/Radio Shack Color Computer 2 & 3
https://sites.google.com/site/dabarnstudio/
Co-Webmaster of The TRS-80 Color Computer Archive
http://www.colorcomputerarchive.com/
Co-Contributor, Co-Editor for CocoPedia
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E-Mail: ooogalapasooo at aol.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Al Hartman <alhartman6 at optonline.net>
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts <coco at maltedmedia.com>
Sent: Tue, Sep 3, 2013 7:56 pm
Subject: Re: [Coco] So, does anyone know where to get disk drives?
I would check with Art Flexser to see if he still offers ADOS. I believe
that not only does ADOS allow you to easily set parameters for each drive,
it should let you tell a drive to skip tracks so you can read a 40 track
disk in an 80 track drive.
But, I would never write to a 40 track disk in an 80-track drive. I would
copy the disk to a blank, bulk erased floppy and write to that. You want
there to be no remains of the wider 48tpi track on the disk.
I just kept my 40 and 80 track drives to the media and disks they were meant
for. Less hassle that way.
I think Cloud 9 still has floppy drives. I recently picked up a bunch of
bare drives on eBay. Finding cases is a bear, however.
Power supplies are easy. You can find the units used with those USB to IDE
cables with the 4 pin connector for under $10.00 from surplus sites. I've
misplaced the link, let me know if you need it and I'll get it from my
friend.
Al
-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher Smith
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2013 7:28 PM
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
Subject: Re: [Coco] So, does anyone know where to get disk drives?
Hey Joel,
Now that I think of it, how would this work from RSDOS? The drives would be
operating at 300RPM, but unless the media selector were in the correct
state, they would still think they had a high track count, right? ... so
that RSDOS would write tracks too close together to work with disks made on
other CoCo drives? I suppose one could do something either in hardware or
software to hit the density selector and set it appropriately. Do they also
have a jumper for this? Wiring a switch into that would be an easy
solution.
Chris
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