On 17/05/2023 04:56, Tony Duell via cctalk wrote:
EXACTLY! I was told that was the best solution for this sort of thing.
Are there any downsides to doing it that way?

If I do go that route, what are the options? I have no knowledge of
them and thus no preference for one over another

As I said at the start I am clueless about this. I really need
somebody to talk me through it, what to get, what to build, what to
download etc.

As I suspect that you have IBM PC compatible systems with 5.25" (high and normal density) and 3.5" (ditto) then I would think the easiest solution for you is to run DOS on such a machine and use Dave Dunfield's ImageDisk: http://dunfield.classiccmp.org/img/index.htm. This assumes you have some way to get files (specifically IMD files) onto and off that system ... perhaps through a network connection? My preferred solution is to boot to DOS using a CF adapter and then - when finished imaging - to connect that CF card to a USB card reader that supports CF and is connected to a more modern machine for archiving, storage of the image or whatever.

This all depends on the FDC on whatever motherboard you have being capable of reading/writing all the modes that you myriad collection requires (or at least the subset you want to use in this manner). TESTFDC (part of the ImageDisk package) will tell you exactly which modes work and don't work with your hardware.


I do also have a FluxEngine that I want to get around to using - see http://cowlark.com/fluxengine/index.html for a list of formats it supports natively. The advantage would be that you are not limited by the PC FDC as the FluxEngine will read flux transitions directly from the connected floppy disk. FluxEngine connects via USB to whatever modern system you choose to use. However, getting theĀ  Cypress PSoC5LP dev board might be a challenge right now given the continuing global supply shortage. FluxEngine supports IMD.

If you want to put a random file on a floppy for something obscure then you need to find software (or a chain of software) that will build an IMD file. DOS will be easy, CP/M is probably simple enough, but after that I expect that you'll potentially need to do some digging for each new format.

Antonio


--
Antonio Carlini
anto...@acarlini.com

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