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How to repair a Floppy drive

You are right there ,its working.:eek:what is the lead coming out of it for?o_OThe number of disks that say they are not bootable and yet check 100% o_O
Not bootable might be because you're using a USB floppy controller that either can't emulate boot functionality on a modern UEFI PC or simply lacks the BIOS support required to do so.
 
Not bootable might be because you're using a USB floppy controller that either can't emulate boot functionality on a modern UEFI PC or simply lacks the BIOS support required to do so.
I get your point there, thanks for that Chrispy :)
On some disks i get a blue or Orange screen and it says HALT2.
 
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You are right there ,its working.:eek:what is the lead coming out of it for?o_OThe number of disks that say they are not bootable and yet check 100% o_O

So you plugged it in the other way round?

Also it would really help if you posted a picture of the actual cable you're wondering about. I do have a memory of seeing those cables on floppy drives before, but I'm not sure.
 
So you plugged it in the other way round?

Also it would really help if you posted a picture of the actual cable you're wondering about. I do have a memory of seeing those cables on floppy drives before, but I'm not sure.
There is only one way to put it in there ,as it has a notch on it as in the photo.Thats not the one i am using.i am using the one with the twist in it.
 

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So much nostalgia.
No, wait, nostalgia isn't the right word. Contempt was the word I was looking for.
Floppy drives evoke no fond memories, only those of anger, anguish, annoyance, and tedium :)
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I doubt that there are pins missing. They probably just weren't needed for that design.

I fix floppy drives by buying a new one. Unless you have all the time in the world, not worth the hassle, I think.
They have/had USB ones too. I still have one that's a double speed from about 15 years ago.
 
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IOMega ZipDisk already entered the chat on page 1 :)

The problem with floppies is that they were unreliable and easily corrupted even when they were new - with the limited capacity making them a true ball-ache when one of your 50 floppies for an install had a bad sector which was often enough to make people tolerate even the abysmal Iomega Zip disks or deal with the headaches of CD-R and CD-RW
Maybe calling them abysmal is unfair - I hated them for their speed, or rather total lack of it. Even though they were technically faster than floppies they were barely faster. I feel like it took 45-60 minutes to fill a zip disk. All they really achieved was saving you the hassle of swapping disks, but it still took FOREVER to install stuff from, or save large files to them.

I had a 4x CDRW drive within the same year of first using Iomega Zip disks at university, and those things held 3x as much data at almost 6x the speed and around a quarter the cost of a 250MB Zip Disk. Iomega zip died off almost overnight for that very good reason!
 
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They have/had USB ones too. I still have one that's a double speed from about 15 years ago.
All done finished them with the drive with the missing pins on the drive :eek:The smallest pile are the ones with stuff ,not a lot of games thou.:(At least it is done now:)I have got anther drive working now,It is out of my £1 pound Sony Vaio :)That,s my next project getting either 98se or ME on there.:)
 

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