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#1
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Wes Groleau wrote:
snip Plus, without a floppy drive, the H89 is useless, so this gets something out of it. Indeed, using the terminal portion has merit, but why not also add the missing floppy (I presume it is just the 5 1/4" drive that you lack)? Look in dumpsters, curbside, surplus and thrift stores for any old XT-clone to rescue a full-height floppy ![]() Regards, Michael |
#2
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msg wrote:
Indeed, using the terminal portion has merit, but why not also add the missing floppy (I presume it is just the 5 1/4" drive that you lack)? Look in dumpsters, curbside, surplus and thrift stores for any old XT-clone to rescue a full-height floppy ![]() All the software is gone--damaged by two many years of garage and basement storage, and I finally got up the courage to discard the remains. Also, the "hard-sector" disks these things used are not as easy to find. I actually have some old Wintel boxes with soft-sector drives. My H89 drive is not actually missing--it is "out-of-alignment" and I don't have the tools to fix that. There's anyway no particular value to me any more in running HDOS or CP/M. It's been too long--I grew accustomed to AmigaDOS, and then to MacOS 9, and now Mac OS X (with Solaris, Linux, and FreeBSD for off-loading non-user-interface tasks) Hey, an alternate idea: Anyone in northeast Indiana want to bring over a serial terminal long enough to reinstall and configure Solaris and Kubuntu, and take what's left of the Heathkit as my inadequate "thank you" ? :-) -- Wes Groleau "There ain't nothin' in this world that's worth being a snot over." -- Larry Wall |
#3
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In article ,
msg writes: Wes Groleau wrote: snip Plus, without a floppy drive, the H89 is useless, so this gets something out of it. Indeed, using the terminal portion has merit, but why not also add the missing floppy (I presume it is just the 5 1/4" drive that you lack)? Look in dumpsters, curbside, surplus and thrift stores for any old XT-clone to rescue a full-height floppy ![]() Not likely to find one as the Heathkit computers prior to the PC world (other than the H8) used hard sectored disks. I can not remember the last time I saw a 5 1/4" hard sectored drive!! bill -- Bill Gunshannon | de-moc-ra-cy (di mok' ra see) n. Three wolves | and a sheep voting on what's for dinner. University of Scranton | Scranton, Pennsylvania | #include std.disclaimer.h |
#4
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Bill Gunshannon wrote:
In article , msg writes: Wes Groleau wrote: snip Plus, without a floppy drive, the H89 is useless, so this gets something out of it. Indeed, using the terminal portion has merit, but why not also add the missing floppy (I presume it is just the 5 1/4" drive that you lack)? Look in dumpsters, curbside, surplus and thrift stores for any old XT-clone to rescue a full-height floppy ![]() Not likely to find one as the Heathkit computers prior to the PC world (other than the H8) used hard sectored disks. I can not remember the last time I saw a 5 1/4" hard sectored drive!! bill I cannot remember any differences in the drives, only the media. The sector holes and index hole were all on the same circle. I used to use a cheap punch to make hard sectored media and IIRC, I just lined up the punch on the index hole and then rotated the media a certain number of degrees, punched, repeated, until done. Here is an excerpt from a website that describes drive and media specifications (http://www.retrotechnology.com/herbs_stuff/drive.html): Facts on hard sectored diskettes and "drives" 1) Hard sector means that the DISKETTE (not the drive) has multiple holes, one for each sector. Normal (soft sectored) diskettes have only ONE hole to mark the "index" or beginning of a track. There is a small hole in the envelope (8-inch, 5.25-inch) which exposes this hole to the disk drive. For hard sectored disks, there are additional holes to mark the beginning of each sector. The index hole is an additional hole between two sector holes. 2) 5.25 inch hard sector diskettes came with 10 sector (11 holes) and rarely 16 sector (17 holes). To count holes, grab a diskette. Rotate the "doughnut" inside the diskette's envelope and count the holes. Remember the index hole is in between two sector holes (so a smaller spacing). Classic systems which used 5.25 inch hard sectored diskettes include Heath H89 (10 sector), NorthStar (10 sector). 3)For 8-inch diskettes, hard sectored diskettes came with 32 sectors (33 holes). These disks were otherwise identical to soft-sectored 8-inch diskettes. But, there was another, even older hard-sectored scheme, where the index hole was near the outer edge of the envelope and far offset from center. 4)While in most cases, it's the MEDIA not the DRIVE which determines hard-sectored operation, there were some 8-inch drives (Shugart 800 and 801) which provided circuitry to generate hard sector pulses from soft sectored diskettes. (Or was that to filter hard sector pulses OUT from hard sectored diskettes? Check with the Shugart 800/801 manual... Regards, Michael |
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