Hallo.
Suche eine solche Ersatz-Floppy.
Ist Slim-Line. Hat einen kleineren Flachbandkabelanschluss.
Suche auch PDF/Datasheet dazu und falls es kompatible Floppy's/Floppy-Emu's gibt die da mechanisch+elektrisch dran passen...
Peter
Hallo.
Suche eine solche Ersatz-Floppy.
Ist Slim-Line. Hat einen kleineren Flachbandkabelanschluss.
Suche auch PDF/Datasheet dazu und falls es kompatible Floppy's/Floppy-Emu's gibt die da mechanisch+elektrisch dran passen...
Peter
Hier noch Bilder der Floppy.
Hat einen 26-pol Flachbandkabelanschluss.
Peter
Kann es auch Mitsumi sein?
xesrjb
Hmm. Zum testen sollte es dem System egal sein.. ob es dann mechanisch passt..?
Hast du denn eins 'über', was geht und was du mir zusenden könntest?
Der 26-pol Flachbandanschluss ist hoffentlich dann Standard/genormt.
Peter
hallo peter
hab so eine floppy ( nec fd1139h)
schwarze blende mit flachband.
bei interesse dann per pn
gruss dietmar
Hmm. Zum testen sollte es dem System egal sein.. ob es dann mechanisch passt..?
Hast du denn eins 'über', was geht und was du mir zusenden könntest?
Der 26-pol Flachbandanschluss ist hoffentlich dann Standard/genormt.
Peter
hallo peter
hab so eine floppy ( nec fd1139h)
schwarze blende mit flachband.
bei interesse dann per
gruss dietmar
Dann scheinst du ja jetzt versorgt zu sein, oder
xesrjb
besteht die möglichkeit ein 3,5 zoll floppy wo der antriebsmotor stottert und stehenbleibt zu reparieren?
Normalerweise Ja.
Dürfte wahrscheinlich an ausgelaufenen Elkos liegen...
Aber was hat das mit Peters Suche zu tun?
Eigentlich nix, sorry. Ist ein sehr seltenes Teac FD235F-105U welches den Strom über das Flachbandkabel bekommt.
Wird sehr schwer an so eines zu kommen, ich habe versucht es zu öffnen, bin aber nicht an den Motor gekommen.
Ausgelaufen ist aber anscheinend nix, nur bin ich mit meinem Latein am Ende.
ZitatAlles anzeigenII.C.2. Can I take a floppy drive out of <insert machine here> and use it in my 1000?
If it's a 5-1/4" drive, generally yes. Note that the data connector may be upside down. It needs to be the right-density drive for the machine.
For 3-1/2" drives, maybe. The HX, TX, SL/2, TL's, RL's, RLX's, and RSX's use a special floppy drive that draws power through the data cable. Connecting a standard 3-1/2" drive not designed to do that can damage both the drive and the computer. If your existing floppy drive does not have a four-wire (red, red, black, yellow) power cable going to it, you MUST NOT replace it with a standard drive (unless you modify the floppy cable, see below). Tandy-style drives were made by Panasonic, Teac, and Sony. Here are some low-density ones:
Sony MFD-63W-70D
Sony MP-F11W-71
Sony MP-F11W-72
Sony MP-F11W-72D
Sony MP-F63W-01D
Teac FD235-136U
Teac FD235F-105U
Teac FD235F-106U
In the case of systems with drives that draw power through the data cable, you can connect a standard drive if you modify the cable. You need to punch holes in the data cable to cut the power; look at the 5-1/4" cable in the same machine. Specifically, +5V is supplied on pins 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11, and +12V is supplied on pins 29, 31, and 33. All of these are ground pins on a standard floppy cable, so you need to cut them. Use a Tandy-style (straight-through, not twisted) floppy cable, like the original that came with the machine. NOTE: If you don't feel confident about modifying your floppy cable in this way, don't. If you make a mistake, you can blow out your power supply, your motherboard, your floppy drive, or all three.
To fix the cable, extract the wires you need to cut by cutting the cable lengthwise between the wires with a utility knife, taking care not to cut the wires themselves. Pin 1 is marked on the cable in red. On a standard floppy drive, all the grounds are connected together, so you don't need to worry about connecting an actual ground wire to the pins you cut. If you want to continue to use a Tandy drive in the same machine, place the standard drive at the end of the cable and the Tandy drive in the middle, and make the cuts above the connector for the Tandy drive, so that the power coming from the motherboard gets to the first (Tandy) drive but not to the second (standard) drive. Of course, you need to connect a power cable to the standard drive.
Another problem you might have with 3-1/2" drives is that the drive may not physically fit in the machine due to the placement and length of the eject button, since the drive bezel is built in to the case. If that is so, some people cut away the built-in drive bezel with a hacksaw to make a "standard" drive bay.
Finally, note that unlike most every other PC, the floppy cable in the 1000-series is not twisted, so you need to set the drive select jumper or switch on the drive. Be aware that some newer drives don't have a drive select jumper (in a Tandy, you could only use them as drive A:). Also, if you put a high-density 3-1/2" drive in a machine that doesn't support one, it works, but only as a low-density drive.