T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1034.1 | try cleaning the heads.... | NOMUNY::WSC023::B_NOTTINGHAM | Bill Nottingham | Tue Dec 11 1990 17:46 | 14 |
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Detlef,
Everytime I have seen such a problem, it was caused by dirt or grit on one of
floopy heads. Try cleaning the heads with a cotton swab soaked on alcohol.
It may require you disassembling the drive. This would happen just by inserting
a disk since the floopy will spin with physical contact to the heads.
I can't imagine a logic component causing a scratch in the floppy media...
hope this helps...
Bill N.
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1034.2 | Magnetic scratch... | HAMSUP::MARXSEN | Univ.Milky.Sol.Earth.FRG.Hamburg | Wed Dec 12 1990 10:13 | 7 |
| Thanks, Bill !
...the disks get scratched magnetical not physical.
We guess there is a spike on only-the-Lord-knows-which signal
that causes the head to write nonsense on the position it stays.
Detlef.
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1034.3 | switch it off to write garbage... | BACHUS::PIRLET | | Thu Dec 13 1990 04:48 | 20 |
| Hmm I think I know that problem. It took me quite a long time to
realise what was going on... I finaly discovered that if the
internal 3.5'' inside drive does not care, my external 5.25'' does
get corrupted any time I switch of the power.
If that is the problem, then it is possible to prevent the write
signal to assert (go low) for some time with the residual power (in
the filtering capacitors) if (for example) both drive select 0 and 1
is asserted (should be impossible condition), or if both read and write
is asserted (another nice impossible condition).
I did start such a project, then left it on the side. I just got
carreful not to switch off with a loaded media in the 5.25'' drive.
In fact I just open the drive any time I do not access it.
Hope that helps.
Louis Richard
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