I recently acquired a fully functional external 3.5" floppy drive by IBM (produced by Sony).
I know that floppy drive was originally designed to go with an IBM laptop, but I don't have one handy.
Problem is, I have no idea what that connector may be. It reminds me of a Centronics connector, but miniature.
I am counting 13 pins on each side of the central piece, for a total of a possible 26 connections.
There are two main parts for this drive.
1) The shell/case which is FRU 05K6187 (or ASM 05K5907)
2) The drive itself, which is FRU 05K8874 (or ASM 20L1931)
The case has a mechanical switch that allows the drive to slide out (for repairs/replacement I guess)
The connector, thus far, appears to be "IBM external floppy drive port" - looks to be an IBM unique thing. No luck searching for adapters with the available data, and I'm not sure what you'd hope to adapt such a device to.
I had one of these for my Thinkpad 240. If you open up the case you'll probably find the drive inside has a standard ribbon cable connection, might be easier to connect to that.
Can confirm that that connector is for a bewildering variety of IBM ThinkPads made from the mid to late 90s - my 365X (made in 1996) and 600X (2000) share this same connector.
But that is not really the drive's connector. The drive is still nested in this rectangular enclosure.
Separating the drive from its plastic container gave surprising results. The drive connects to its container with a short ribbon.
Looking closer, the ribbon is one-sided. (The blue plastic covers the opposite side and is non-conductive, probably there to help straighten the ribbon)
So here's where we are at right now :
Floppy drive (26 pins) --> Rectangular enclosure (40/80 pins) --> External enclosure and wire (13/26 pins) --> Laptop
Since there is circuitry, but no chips, I'm deducing (correct me if I'm wrong) by the lowest common denominator that only a maximum of 26 pins are "live" and serve a purpose. Maybe even less.
Also worth noting are the inscriptions on the 26->40 converter.
I'm deducing (again, correct me if I'm wrong) that maybe some of the ground wires could be potentially combined, thus lowering the required number of wires, from 34 to 26 for a "proprietary" standard, while still retaining the standard floppy drive construction and communication logic.
And since power does not come through a separate cable, that means (If we look at the standard floppy power connector) that we lose another 4 wires. That would leave 17 for data, 4 for power, giving a total of 21; leaving 5 for grounds.
My overall guess is that I'm dealing with a standard floppy drive with a non-standard connector.
In fact with enough patience, I could probably build myself an [IBM proprietary] to [Standard Floppy] connector.
Just a quick update for anyone reading... I have found a female connector for this drive's cable.
I'll start working on a prototype for the IBM to IDE adapter when it arrives.
Hi Beegle, any new on that project of yours? I've got a similar issue (26 pins floppy drive that I want to replace with a standard 34 pins one so I need to make an adapter) so I could learn a thing or two from your experience 😀
Hi Beegle, any new on that project of yours? I've got a similar issue (26 pins floppy drive that I want to replace with a standard 34 pins one so I need to make an adapter) so I could learn a thing or two from your experience 😀
Hey Jonas... sadly the part I ordered never arrived and the refund gave me trouble with the seller, so this project has been put on hold, for now.
I'll chime back when I start it again.
i made a laptop floppy to standard pc floppy adapter a couple of years back, also made an opposite adapter that did work (26 to 34 pin) but no photos of that, and it's stored in my parents house.
Apologies for the thread necro, but hopefully this helps someone else. I found out this is a 26-pin "Very High Density Cable Interconnect" aka VHDCI connector. Apparently, IBM made an adapter to convert it to standard Centronics parallel, and they are still readily available. http://suntekpc.com/htm-2/adapter-db25m-vh26f … ibm-08k6359.htm