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| Click here to select a new forum. | | Did I realign my floppy drive head, or am I being overly optimistic? | Posted by: mooseman on 2024-08-18 21:43:18 Okay, so you know how you're not supposed to completely disassemble a Mac floppy drive because it messes up the head alignment? Yeah, so I read that *after* I disassembled and lubed the drive. Oops.
Anyway, I think I've got it re-aligned now, but it seems to have been suspiciously easy to do so is there any way to make absolutely sure? This was a Sony SuperDrive out of a 7300. What I did:
- Moved the zero track sensor all the way to the rear, left the screw slightly loose
- Inserted a factory 1.44MB floppy, the drive couldn't read it
- Ejected the floppy, moved the ZTS very slightly forward, reinserted the floppy
- Repeated this a bunch of times until the disk mounted
Now I had a disk that would mount, but I would get errors opening any files. To dial it in I slightly loosened the two screws on the stepper motor and rotated it a tiny amount at a time. In one direction the disk would no longer mount at all, so I went the other direction. Eventually I found a point where all the files would open and then I locked it down.
It seems to be reading disks fine now. I also used Disk Copy to image the floppy and that completed as well without errors.
This only took me about fifteen minutes so after reading the horror stories I'm a bit suspicious that maybe I missed something, though. Anything else I should be testing here or am I good? | Posted by: Big Ben on 2024-08-18 23:41:28 Hello,
Head alignment is a bit different (it’s about how the head is oriented), you have dealt with track alignment which is fastidious but easier.
I made this mistake few times, some drives can’t be disassembled without messing with the zero track detector, I did clean my 6100 floppy drive and got lucky it epoxy sealing forced the screw back into their original position.
Overall I think you nailed it, the last test you can do is making a floppy (formatting + write data to it) and try to read it in a known working drive. | Posted by: mooseman on 2024-08-19 11:52:01 Ah, cool, thanks for correcting my terminology.
Okay, will do some more testing but it sounds like I was good and/or lucky on the track alignment, thanks. | | 1 |
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