Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2016 06:39:04 -0400 From: Peter Cetinski <p...@pski.net> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk@classiccmp.org> Cc: "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts" <cct...@classiccmp.org> Subject: Re: Imaging Old Disks Advice Needed
> Well, I made a number of these this weekend and I just left the end open. The hub > keeps the cookie in place. Thanks to everyone for the input. > > So, I was able to image half of the disks without issue. The others all had a few > bad tracks. On most of those I don't see any physical damage so I was wondering > if there were any other techniques to possibly recover those tracks? Baking the > cookie? Is there a good tool to merge tracks from multiple disks if I find another > copy of the software that has the missing tracks? Pete: I've had pretty good luck during a data restoration project by ensuring the drive heads are clean and then also cleaning the cookie VERY GENTLY with good quality rubbing alcohol (I'm using 91%, some say you should use better stuff) on a cotton ball. My method has been to put the cookie on a clean, dry, soft surface. The disks I'm working on are Apple ][, so flippy (if the jacket is punched), otherwise I only need to concentrate on the "bottom" side of the cookie. Essentially, the side without the hub ring. I use a very fine-tipped needle top bottle (found it in the baking section of a local big-name craft store) and apply a reasonable amount of rubbing alcohol then use a fresh cotton swab and gently clean the surface. Depending on how it goes, I'll clean it a second time. Note, some of the disks look just fine, but still have some issue reading. This cleaning process has been highly successful (maybe 85%?) for me even with disks that looked clean. Also, on a few prior attempts I've had inexplicable results in trying different drives. I don't know if alignments, speeds, magnetic sensitivity or other factors were at play but it's worth trying as another trick to have in the collection. Sometimes it worked better, sometimes it was worse. I am not 100% sure, but I thought the "baking" was for media that was shedding or at some risk of having a physical issue with delamination, etc. Also, I can't really help on the merging question. I'd think you could just cut the resulting images together using a hex editor or similar. Naturally, you'd have to know where the bad parts were in the file. Maybe you could start with a 'fc /b filename.bin filename.bin' at a Windows command prompt, note the offsets of differences between multiple reads and visually compare those sections in a hex editor? Good luck with the data restoration! See ya. -Todd