VOGONS


First post, by RetroViator

User metadata
Rank Newbie
Rank
Newbie

I bought a Dell Dimension V333c for my parents in 1998. It was gifted back to me and restored in 2019 (https://retroviator.com/dell-dimension-v333c/). It has always bothered me that it only supports one floppy drive. Back when I restored the system, I tried adding a 5.25 drive, but I had no luck. The latest BIOS version (A08) seems to only support a single floppy drive. It will let you chose a variety of formats from 360K to 2.88MB, but it seems to only see Drive A:.

I realize this is a long shot, has but has anyone installed a second floppy in the Dell Dimension V333c?

https://retroviator.com

Reply 1 of 2, by jakethompson1

User metadata
Rank l33t
Rank
l33t

I've heard of this both being an arbitrary BIOS limitation (in which case Linux with kernel command line to override the BIOS to specify the floppy drives would be a good test) as well as the Super I/O having multiplexed pins, such that dual floppy has to be sacrificed if the board maker wants some other feature (like parallel port).

Reply 2 of 2, by DaveDDS

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

I have run into a few systems which only supported one floppy drive in hardware, the select for the second drive was not brought out (perhaps saving a pin "that nobody ever uses" on an IC)

Assuming you have a proper "twisted" cable supporting A: and B: - Boot DOS on the working drive, and try accessing the second with ImageDisk.

IMD does not use BIOS - accesses the floppy hardware directly (I have both drives set to "NONE" on my IMD system - to avoid anything else trying to "mess" with the floppies).

This will tell you if the second floppy hardware is connected and working.

Also, since it doesn't use BIOS - IMD can easily use differnt drives connected though the same floppy interface as well. I do this to support many different drive types directly (5.25" - 360k 1.2m, 3.5" - 720k 1.44m, 8") - I just have a "power switch box" which cuts all power lines to a drive while I change it.

but ... for "normal" use, BIOS has to be configured for the correct drive type. There may be a tool somewhere to "restore" BIOS on the fly - but I've never really looked .

- Dave ; https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ; "Daves Old Computers" ; SW dev addict best known:
ImageDisk: rd/wr ANY floppy PChardware can ; Micro-C: compiler for DOS+ManySmallCPU ; DDLINK: simple/small FileTrans(w/o netSW)via Lan/Lpt/Serial