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- Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!udel!princeton!phoenix.Princeton.EDU!bathurst
- From: bathurst@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Bruce Bathurst)
- Subject: Re: Using HD disks as DD disks
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.104013.28558@Princeton.EDU>
- Originator: news@nimaster
- Keywords: disks, disk drive
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: phoenix.princeton.edu
- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <1992Dec23.202219.114@cbnewsm.cb.att.com> <1hb8h7INN4t6@flop.ENGR.ORST.EDU> <1992Dec28.194553.18651@mksol.dseg.ti.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 10:40:13 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- This is a confusing subject. I take it that trying to format the 3.5"
- disk produces "Bad or Invalid Media" (sic) and trying the 5.25" gives
- "Track 0 Bad, Disk Unusable" Put a piece of opaque tape over the notch
- opposite the write-protect notch and a HD 3.5" diskette is DD is
- wearing the clothes of DD and will format, read, and write DD. The
- only cure for the 5.25" disk is a kludge: put a 360K disk in the
- drive, issue FORMAT, after DOS reads the boot record it says "...Press
- RETURN to start" (or something) pull out the 360K and put in the 1.2
- Mb disk.
-
- The problem is this. The 5.25" floppies double their capacity by
- doubling the number of tracks. Hence the wide read head of the lower
- density drive can't read a single track, and it can't read the disk's
- boot record.
-
- The 3.5" floppies double their capacity by doubling the number of
- sectors in a track. Hence the track density is the same for DD and
- HD, and the lower density drive will read the boot record without
- problem. Oh, no! People can format HD disks in DD drives! We'll put
- a hole through the diskette case, so the machine will know there is a
- floppy with a thin coating in the drive and will refuse to cooperate
- with such unorthodox behavior.
-
- This concern with improper use was explained nicely by the last
- respondant (but which I'll expand on anyway). HD diskettes are coated,
- like DD, but then polished more to reduce surface bumps that would
- produce magnetic irregularities. This thins the coating. The lower
- density drive is designed to penetrate a thick coating with magnetism;
- when it does this to the thin coating, the magntic domains grow
- sideways rather than downward and may interfere with other tracks.
-
- Mother Industry protects us from such folly (though it may work).
-
- Bruce (Gypsy Scholar)
- --
- Department of Geological and Geophysical Sciences
- Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544
- bathurst@phoenix.princeton.edu bathurst@pucc.bitnet !princeton!phoenix!bathurst
-