

- Floppy disk formatting program for windows 8 serial#
- Floppy disk formatting program for windows 8 upgrade#
- Floppy disk formatting program for windows 8 Pc#
Mac II- 800k floppy There was a SWIM chip upgrade available to enable this machine to support 1.44Mb floppies. This is true - I own one - it was made by Iomega it read/writes standard floppies and its own special 21Mb MO disks (which are the same dimensions as a standard floppy!)ĥ12ke- I think 400k, may have been 800k - Yep, it's an 800K mechanism I will gladly transfer one floppy for you (any more and you would have to cover the shipping costs). I live in the UK, Northern Ireland to be more specific.
Floppy disk formatting program for windows 8 Pc#
How you are going to get PC Exchange to run on the 512Ke with disk swapping beats me (unless you either upgrade to SCSI or get an additional floppy drive) PC Exchange can read/write PC formatted 720K disks. It does however have an 800K floppy drive (e was for enhanced!)
Floppy disk formatting program for windows 8 serial#
The 512Ke doesn't have SCSI built in and it doesn't support handshaking or synchronous serial transfers. Yes, it will not be as reliable as a genuine single or double density disk- but try to find those new anymore View image: /infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif No, this won't kill the floppy as some people say- I've done it too many times to count. You can turn a 1.44 floppy into a 400/800 by putting tape over the hole- opposite the lock/unlock hole. Insert floppy, format as 400k (you'll need to put scotch tape over the hole that says its a HD floppy)Ĥ00/800k floppies can be read/written by the SuperDrive but can NOT be read/written by USB floppy drives since those are PC floppies in a USB housing. They are dirt cheap and have SuperDrives. Some high end PC did (maybe not sgi- they went intel only recently) I am less than sure, but SGI may have used them.

I know there was a SCSI version (yes- a SCSI floppy drive) and I think their was a standard floppy. It would be hard to find now, and I don't even know who made them (Teac comes to mind) but there WAS a variable speed floppy available for the PC. I had been told once that PC drives could sometimes read these. I forget, but there's that one site with all the old MacOS versions ready for download (no, I'm not talking Apple's FTP, but rather every single freakin version ever made). Null modem is your best bet, or to try to get the floppies from someone with an older mac (the ones that auto-eject are the ones you need to look at) who can format/copy the disks for you, or create them from the disk images you can find on the web. On Macs with OS 7.x and later, IIRC, you get DOS compatibility for floppy reads and writes with nothing extra necessary.Ĭonsidering the cost of appletalk to ethernet bridge devices, forget about it. You can try using WinImage to dupe an old 800k floppy disk, but I doubt that it'll work for you.Īlso, some later Mac's in the Mac II series, IIRC, did some weird crap to the 800k/400k format floppies and would read them as only single sided when they were in fact double sided (the 800k floppies). New Macs and PC's (always) use the standard crap 1.4MB floppy drive, and forsake compatibility with the 800k and 400k floppy drive of the old compact Mac. The 800K and 400K floppy drives in older compact Macs have a very hard time using them in a PC, given that the formatting requires that whackass variable speed crap in the old Mac's.
