First post, by TheAbandonwareGuy
- Rank
- Oldbie
Before anyone says the obvious: KyroFlux is out of my price range right now (out of work, part of why I finally have time to deal with this project).
OK, so about a decade ago I bought off eBay a lot of 1000 3.5 inch floppy disks. Literally 1000 of them. Of those I'd say the spread is something like this:
* 300-400 random discs with labels containing anything from obviously mundane (IE: personal tax forms, small business records) or absolute gibberish (to me, I'm sure these labels at one point had meaning to somebody)
* 100-200 completely unlabeled discs, almost all of which have proven to have some form of data on them.
* 100~ IBM diskettes ranging from reference disks to OS2 install disks
* 150~ Microsoft branded floppy disketttes containing assorted microsoft products
* 100-200 random commercial products
* 100 discs that I'd describe as "interesting" with labels that make me think they might contain lost software, literature (I've found multiple examples of what appear to be technical guides from various BBS's), etc.
The random discs, the IBM diskettes, and the Microsoft diskettes are all getting ignored right now. By my estimation they have the lowest chance of containing anything both interesting and unpreserved. The commercial disks I am going to check against the holding of the IA and various other websites and see if there is anything that needs preserved.
That just leaves the rest. And there in lies my problem. I have owned these for *over* a decade now, and they haven't exactly always been stored the best. The last 6 years they've spent out in my enclosed garage in a sealed cardboard box. I'm not seeing any signs of moisture damage which is good, but they've still be in an storage environment without climate control, and thus have been exposed to what I'm sure has included near or below zero temperature, as well as heat pushing well towards 100 degrees.
I am getting ALOT of disks that Windows 10 using my USB floppy disk drive (that I purchased 10 years ago to read these exact disks) suggest are entirely unformatted. Alarmingly these include a number of disks I know for a fact used to read with this exact drive because they have my handwriting on them from me randomly going through and looking at various disks over the years (this is a project that has had many false starts) and then labeling them in a way that actually lets me know what they contain. IIRC the original failure rate was about 1 out of 10 disks being outright bad, and another 1 out of that 9 being less than fully readable. I'd estimate that ratio has jumped starkly to 70~ percent of disks being fully unreadable. That is such a stark increase in failure rate between these disks being approximately 20 years old and them being 30 years old that I almost suspect this USB floppy drive has failed (I'm setting a up one of my retro rigs later, partly to confirm its not just this shitty early 2010s Sony USB floppy drive and partly because I'm sure most software tools want direct access to the hardware).
So my questions are:
* What are the best non-kyroflux tools available for reading and analyzing floppy disk on IBM-PC/Windows hardware? Because that's what I have on hand
* What brands/models of 3.5 inch floppy drive are considered to be the most reliable? (I have many many floppy drives on hand, so if someone gives a few examples I should find something in the stockpile)
* In particular what are the best options for identifying what format a floppy disk is (because I have no way to tell if a disk is truly unformatted, or merely in a format incompatible with modern windows)
* What are the best tools for attempting to recover data from disks that refuse to read correctly?
* What are the best methods for cleaning floppy disks I suspect might be dirty? Would a q-tip an isopropyl alcohol damage the media surface?
Right now I'm looking at:
OmniFlop: http://www.shlock.co.uk/Utils/OmniFlop/OmniFlop.htm
Disk2img: http://www.oldskool.org/pc/disk2img
ImageDisk: http://dunfield.classiccmp.org//img/index.htm
Anadisk: https://electrickery.nl/comp/pcsoft/index.html
Is there anything else I should add to this arsenal? I'd like to be able to get to a point where I can at least definitely rule out if a disk is truly unsalvageable (disks that look like a KyroFlux might do the job I can hold back until whenever I am able to acquire on).
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I used to own over 160 graphics card, I've since recovered from graphics card addiction