Using the Greaseweazel is a two stage process.  The GW itself connects to the actual drive and just records the flux transitions as a series of zeros and ones.  This is transferred to a computer (PC, MAC, Linux) where the captured flux image is analyzed by a second program which understands floppy formats.  You tell the analyzer what you are looking at.

The analyzer can then provide a binary dump of the actual data (track by track) or for operating systems that it understands it can extract directories and files.

On 1/20/2023 12:52 PM, Zane Healy via cctalk wrote:
I’m now aware of the GreaseWeazle, but what I’ve not seen is if it allows 
standard access to the data on a floppy, or only provides a way to image the 
disk.  With an USB attached 3.5” floppy the disk mounts on my Mac, and I can 
easily pull files off the disk.  Does this work with the GreaseWeazle and a 
5.25” floppy drive?

Zane




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