Reply 20 of 27, by DosFreak
- Rank
- l33t++
Suprisingly most of my floppies from 1990+ survived. Ever since 2000 I'd been slowly transferring them to my external HD's. I didn't have that many floppies...mabye 50+ but I was just lazy. 😀 Sadly while I was in Tech School my Parent's moved and alot of good ones were lost including my 5.25" Lost Treasures of Infocom collection. 🙁
It's amazing how good the quality is for ummm what's the word, the floppies that had programs on 'em already as compared to the ones you buy in the store. Since I wiped all of my floppies, every time I grab a blank floppy out of my "floppy box" almost every time the store bought floppies turn out to be bad whereas the ones that came with programs usually are the good ones. Just goes to show how bad quality can get once a produce goes out of use.....
Trusting HD's for a backup solution had always kind of bothered me but I have duplicate HD's for every one of my HD's.....just have to make sure I listen for strange noises and perform regular maintenance. Too bad you can't lookup SMART info over USB (heh...like that would help). Going to see if Spinrite v6 can see SMART data from DOS since I heard that it can see HD's over USB/Firewire.
Anyways, for the past 4 years using external HD's as backup I've only had 1-2 Western Digitals fail (never both HD's with the same data). The HD failure was my fault due to carrying these things all around the world and the transfer and heat over in Iraq was what probably killed 'em.