> So,  hole "covered" tells the drive to write at 2x the speed!  Interesting, 
> and makes sense.

Well, no, hole "covered" signals 250Kbps low write current DD so if anything 
it's the other way around (unless my aging brain is even more confused than 
usual).

But I think the actual data rate is determined by the controller when writing, 
and the disk data when reading, so it will always be 250Kbps.

What causes the problem IMO is that the drive electronics are 'tuned' to the 
wrong frequency when it's reading 250Kbps while set to 500; some of the newer 
'intelligent' drives may even detect an error and suppress the ready or index 
signals when they see this situation.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Stephen Adolph 
To: m...@bitchin100.com 
Sent: Monday, March 25, 2019 12:29 PM
Subject: Re: [M100] question regarding floppy disks.


Thanks Mike, that must be the answer.


I notice that the formatting process for an HD disk in an HD drive on the COCO 
fails after the first pass on the disk formatting run.
That must mean - reading back to verify the format is failing.


So,  hole "covered" tells the drive to write at 2x the speed!  Interesting, and 
makes sense.


and you are right, I am buying a couple of boxes of DD disks locally.






On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 12:23 PM Mike Stein <mhs.st...@gmail.com> wrote:

The difference in coercivity between DD and HD 3.5" diskettes is actually 
relatively small, ~660 vs. ~720 Oersteds, compared to the much larger 290 vs. 
660 difference of 5.25" diskettes.

But the thickness of the coating is also different, HD being less than half 
that of DD, and different materials are used with the HD having a finer 
granularity.

Nevertheless, you can usually get away with using HD diskettes at DD (with the 
hole covered if using an HD drive), although it's not quite as reliable as 
using the proper media, especially regarding long-term data retention (probably 
because the lower DD write current makes them more susceptible to being 
erased); even the other way around often works, i.e. a DD diskette with a hole 
punched at HD, although this is even less reliable.

Anecdotally it seems that 3.5" HD diskettes in general have become somewhat 
unreliable, even used at HD, which may at least partially account for folks 
having issues using them at DD.

But I think we're missing the more important issue; the reason for all these 
differences is to squeeze more bits per inch on a track; unlike 5.25", 3.5" 
diskettes all have 80 tracks and run at the same 300 RPM, so of course this 
means that data  will normally be written and read at twice the rate in HD mode 
(500Kbps) than at the DD rate (250Kbps).

I assume that the CoCo controller only transfers data at 250Kbps whereas with 
the HD hole uncovered the drive will expect to see data at 500Kbps (and use HD 
write current) and I suspect that's why Steve's having trouble.

3.5" DD diskettes are still around; why not use the right media in the first 
place.

m
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Kurt McCullum 
To: m100@lists.bitchin100.com 
Sent: Monday, March 25, 2019 11:02 AM
Subject: Re: [M100] question regarding floppy disks.


Yeah that does sound strange. And I agree, the drive 'should' switch based on 
the hole in the disk. Does it format to 720 or 1.44 when the hole is covered?


On Mon, Mar 25, 2019, at 7:37 AM, Stephen Adolph wrote:

Kurt, agree with everything you have said.



The odd thing is-



* using an HD disk in an DD/HD drive, and covering the hole with tape, would 
seem to be BAD

---> because you are telling the drive to use the wrong current settings for 
the actual disk media.



However, this is apparently the way to make my system functional.



so, strange.  I would have thought it would be the opposite - let the drive 
decide what current to use, matched to the "cookie".





On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 10:19 AM Kurt McCullum <ku...@fastmail.com> wrote:



The magnetic coercivity on HD disks is different than on regular disks. It 
requires more energy to lay down the tracks. If you start with a blank HD disk 
rather than a pre-formatted disk then you have a better chance. That's because 
once the HD tracks are laid down, you need to erase them for your new format. 
If your drive doesn't have enough energy to completely erase the existing 
track, it wont work. 720k disks have a lower coercivity and therefore work with 
either a 720k or 1.44mb drive. A 1.44 drive has a sensor for the open hole and 
when it sees that hole, it will use a higher level of write energy to properly 
work with the media. When that hole is covered, it will use a lower level which 
is what the 720k media is looking for. Though I do remember that formatting a 
720k disk in a 1.44mb drive didn't always work when going back to a 720k drive. 



Not sure about the Coco drive, but my TPDD2 does not work reliably with HD 
disks. I have only been able to format one properly and it had data failure 
shortly after.



Kurt



On Sun, Mar 24, 2019, at 6:32 PM, Stephen Adolph wrote:

interestingly,



Yes, if I take an HD disk, and tape over the hole to make it appear to be a DD 
disk, then it works.



But why?



the floppy is capable of both formats...



On Sun, Mar 24, 2019 at 7:39 PM Mike Stein <mhs.st...@gmail.com> wrote:



Have you tried closing the HD sense hole with a piece of tape or similar?

----- Original Message -----

From: Stephen Adolph

To: m...@bitchin100.com

Sent: Sunday, March 24, 2019 6:08 PM

Subject: Re: [M100] question regarding floppy disks.



the Coco is using it's standard controller



When issuing the DSKINI 0 command the coco tries to format for 180kB.



The combination of 

(Coco, std controller, PC 1.44MB drive + a 720kB dd floppy) works



whereas

(Coco, std controller, PC 1.44MB drive + a 1.44MBB hd floppy) does not work



this is something I don't understand!







On Sun, Mar 24, 2019 at 5:42 PM Gregory McGill <arcadeshop...@gmail.com> wrote:

likely the floppy controller doesn't support 80 tracks or high density..  most 
of the controllers of the era are ds/sd 40 track or dsdd 40 track..   are you 
able to format 720k? ds/dd 80 track? 



Greg



On Sun, Mar 24, 2019 at 2:38 PM Stephen Adolph <twospru...@gmail.com> wrote:

I'll start by saying this isn't an M100 or TPDD discussion, but just looking to 
understand something.



I have a Tandy Coco3 with a 3.5 inch floppy drive.  The drive is a standard PC 
drive and it is working well.



Seems though that I cannot use 1.44 MB floppies in that drive. They don't seem 
to want to format.



I really don't understand where the problem could be.

- the drive and the floppy are compatible

- the disk is known good and formats at 1.44MB in a PC

- if it can support 135 TPI, why can't it support 35 TPI?



Does anyone know what's going on?



thx

Steve

Reply via email to