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[email protected] October 9th 06 06:18 PM

usual floppy drive breakdown?
 
what usually breaks down in floppy drives with moderate mileage?


Homer J Simpson October 9th 06 06:44 PM

usual floppy drive breakdown?
 

wrote in message
ups.com...

what usually breaks down in floppy drives with moderate mileage?


What sort and size of drive?





Michael A. Terrell October 9th 06 07:06 PM

usual floppy drive breakdown?
 
wrote:

what usually breaks down in floppy drives with moderate mileage?



Dried out lubricant, and dirty heads.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida

Michael Black October 9th 06 07:11 PM

usual floppy drive breakdown?
 
) writes:
what usually breaks down in floppy drives with moderate mileage?


They get full of dirt and grit, because air has been pulled through
them. This obviously varies with the size, since older 5.25" drives
were open, but 3.5" had a flap, except for a lot of Mac 3.5" drives.

They seize up from lack of use.

I suspect heads get mangled, because someone has put a floppy
in badly or the wrong way and tried to jam it in.

Decades ago, a lot was made of adjusting the speed of the motor,
and about head alignment. You don't hear about that much anymore,
but I have no idea if that's because the drives got better, or (and
I suspect this is a more immediate reason) the drives got so cheap
that it made more sense to replace the drive than do labor intensive
alignments.

And the far lower costs (I paid hundreds of dollars for my first drive
in 1984, even about five years later they'd dropped considerably, and
I have no clue how much they cost since I have so many spare drives from
scrapped computers) means that few really keep track of how floppy
drives fail now. They just replace the drive, and that's it.

Michael


Jeff Findley October 10th 06 04:30 PM

usual floppy drive breakdown?
 

"Michael Black" wrote in message
...
And the far lower costs (I paid hundreds of dollars for my first drive
in 1984, even about five years later they'd dropped considerably, and
I have no clue how much they cost since I have so many spare drives from
scrapped computers) means that few really keep track of how floppy
drives fail now. They just replace the drive, and that's it.


They're still pretty cheap, but eventually, I figure they'll go up in price
since so few new PC's even have a floppy drive anymore. But I'm like you,
I've got enough spare floppy drives that I don't worry about this anymore.

Jeff
--
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a
little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor
safety"
- B. Franklin, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations (1919)




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