First post, by torindkflt
I have two vintage PCs with 5.25in floppy drives. One of them has two double-density drives, and the other has one high-density drive. The system with a high-density drive also has a 3.5in floppy drive, so I would like to use it as an intermediary to copy files onto the system with the double-density drives. Now, I know that double-density disks written in a high-density drive are borderline impossible to properly read with a double-density drive simply because of the mechanical differences between how they are physically designed, and of course this is causing me some extreme difficulty.
What I would like to know is if there is anything I can do, other than replacing or swapping drives between the two systems, that'll make it easier for double-density disks written in a high-density drive to be read in a double-density drive. Perhaps a special utility to "half-step" the write head on the high-density drive to write the same data twice to the wider double-density tracks, if such a thing exists? Or maybe a Debug command I can run on the double-density system to do an equivalent of a low-level format on the disks between copies to help reduce noise and cross-contamination of the different track widths? FORMAT /U doesn't help at all. If at all possible, I'm interested in software-only solutions, as I'd like to avoid tearing these machines apart yet again just to copy some files.
Please be aware that the system with the double-density drives is currently only running a bare basic minimal install of DOS 3.3 and therefore has no terminal programs or any other means of copying files via serial. I'm limited to what's currently on the hard drive, and whatever I can get onto disk using the other system that it is then able to successfully copy.
Thanks for any assistance on this potentially futile endeavor.