> 
> My advice: buy an old desktop computer.  Buy a standard PC floppy drive (a 
> dual drive if possible to give both 3.5 and 5.25 support).  Then run Linux, 
> use the "fdparm" tool to set the media format if necessary, and copy the 
> image with "dd".
> 
> Roughly speaking this is how I read and write RX50 floppies.  More precisely, 
> I usually do it with my "rstsflx" tool, which (a) understands RSTS file 
> systems so I can manipulate things at that level, and (b) knows about RX50 
> interleaving and how to issue the ioctl that sets 10 sector per track format.
> 
>       paul
> 

My views exactly. 

I’ve had great experiences with a PIII Dell GX1. I’m most comfortable in a 
Windows enviroment, and have found both PUTR, for DOS, and Omniflop for Windows 
NT, to be perfectly suitable for writing disk images. PUTR is mainly for DEC 

As for loading in/loading out files from images, there’s likely at least 
something out there you can make use of. Even if there’s no host OS native 
software for writing directly to images, there’s almost certainly an emulator, 
which would work off disk images that can later be written to real hardware 
disks.

Ultimately, there are ways and means to do this, but ultimately an older PC 
with a real floppy controller is by large the easiest way.

Josh

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