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Computer Hardware
Information about computer floppy drives.

Quick links

Floppy drive ABCs
Floppy history
3.5" floppy diskette
5 1/4" floppy diskette
Floppy cable
Troubleshooting
Creating a floppy boot disk
Floppy disk definitions

FLOPPY DRIVE ABCs

Originally created in 1967 by IBM, the floppy reference is derived from the floppy media that is encased within the protective casing. This media is a magnetic medium and is written to much like the method used by hard disk drives. Floppy drives have been found in computers for several years and are commonly still being used today. The next generation of floppy drives will more than likely be the LS-120 diskette drives which are already being included in many computers now.

FLOPPY HISTORY

8" Disk - The first disk was introduced in 1971. The disk was 8" in diameter with a magnetic coating, enclosed in a cardboard case with the capacity of one megabyte. Conversely to hard disks, the heads actually touch the disk, like in a cassette or video player which actually wears the media.

5.25" Disk - 160KB first Created in 1976 and later becoming a standard in 1978

  • 5.25" Single Side - 160KB
    5.25" Double Side - 360KB
    5.25" Double Side High Density - 1.2MB

3.5" Disk - Created by IBM in 1984, which even today are still commonly used. Most 3 1/2" newer disks have a capacity of up to 1.44MB.

  • 3.5" Double Density - 720KB
    3.5" High Density - 1.44MB
    3.5" Extended Density (IBM ONLY) - 2.88MB

3.5" FLOPPY DISKETTE

Below we have represented a picture of the now commonly used 3.5" floppy diskettes. The below representation is what the back of a floppy diskette looks like. As you can see there are four main visible parts:

First, the top left of the back of the floppy there is a small tab. This tab enables the floppy disk to be switched from write protected and un-write protected. Move the tab to the top position, creating a hole, makes the disk write protected. This means that nothing can be written, erased or deleted from the diskette. Moving the tab to the bottom position allows the disk to be un-write protected, which means the diskette can be written too, erased, and or have information deleted from the diskette. Some diskettes, which are generally cheaper diskettes, will be missing this tab. To write information to the diskette you will have to place a piece of scotch tape over the hole.

Second, the top right hand of the back of the floppy you will notice a small hole. This tells the computer if the diskette within the computer is a High Density diskette.

Third, you will notice the circular metal disk in the middle of the floppy diskette. This is used to rotate the magnetic medium within the floppy disk casing.

Fourth, you will see a metal door which can be moved left and then will snap back to its original position. This door is used to allow the read/write head within the floppy drive to have the capability of accessing the magnetic medium within the casing. Once the diskette is removed, this door will snap back into position, helping to prevent anything from getting on the magnetic medium and destroying it.

5 1/4" FLOPPY DISKETTE

Below is a representation of a 5 1/4" floppy commonly used in 1980's and is generally no longer used today. The 5 1/4" floppy diskette was really floppy (flimsy) when compared to the 3.5" floppy diskette.

As you can notice in the above illustration, the 5 1/4" floppy does not have many involved components. First, you will notice the Write protection tab which would be present if the diskette allowed information to be written to it. Placing a piece of tape over the hole or if the hole was not present would make the diskette write protected.

Second, you should notice the large hole in the center of the floppy diskette. This hole allowed the platter within the floppy to be rotated allowing the information to be read from the write access hole.

Third, you should notice the Index hole, this hole was the computer's way of knowing where the starting point of the sector was on the diskette by physically having a hole punched in the film disc within the plastic casing.

Finally, you should notice the write access hole. This is the location which information would be read from as the disc within would rotate. However, because there was no protection like that found on the 3.5" floppy diskette, the 5 1/4" floppy diskette was generally protected by placing it within a protective sleeve.

FLOPPY CABLE

In the below illustration we have represented what a floppy cable may look like. In the below illustration this floppy cable allows a desktop computer to have two floppy drives connected to one controller like the IDE / EIDE controller. Because floppy drives almost always do not have a master / slave jumper, the drives are defined by cable select, which can be identified by looking for the cable twist as shown below.

A standard floppy drive connector contains 34-pin holes; we have listed the pins and the description of each pin below.

PIN 1 Ground
PIN 2 Unused
PIN 3 Ground
PIN 4 Unused
PIN 5 Ground
PIN 6 Unused
PIN 7 Ground
PIN 8 Index
PIN 9 Ground
PIN 10 Motor Enable A
PIN 11 Ground
PIN 12 Drive Select B
PIN 13 Ground
PIN 14 Drive Select A
PIN 15 Ground
PIN 16 Motor Enable B
PIN 17 Ground
PIN 18 Direction (Stepper Motor)
PIN 19 Ground
PIN 20 Step Pulse
PIN 21 Ground
PIN 22 Write Data
PIN 23 Ground
PIN 24 Write Enable
PIN 25 Ground
PIN 26 Track 0
PIN 27 Ground
PIN 28 Write Protect
PIN 29 Ground
PIN 30 Read Data
PIN 31 Ground
PIN 32 Select Head 1
PIN 33 Ground
PIN 34 Ground

Index

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Resolved

Were you able to locate the answer to your questions?
TROUBLESHOOTING
Reference Issue / Question
Hardware Dictionary definition and related links on the floppy drive.
Boot disk Additional information and help with creating a bootable floppy.
Cleaning Additional information and help with cleaning computer hardware.
Contacts Contact information for floppy drive manufacturers.
CHADD Additional information with installing computer hardware.
CH000019 Copying floppy to floppy.
CH000038 Changing the drive letter of a disk drive.
CH000047 Hard drive is not being detected when using a boot diskette.
CH000101 Sector not found error.
CH000119 How to copy a large file or directory to floppy diskette?
CH000229 Invalid / Non System Disk error.
CH000277 Basic floppy disk drive troubleshooting.
CH000278 Floppy drive light never goes off.
CH000279 Unable to boot from floppy.
CH000287 Floppy drive works in Windows but not MS-DOS.
CH000302 Noise from the computer.
CH000324 Floppy drive reading as B and not A.
CH000343 3.5" floppy being detected as 5.25" floppy.
CH000349 FDC Failure
CH000381 A serious disk error occurred trying to read/write drive.
CH000387 Disk boot failure.
CH000426 Floppy disk  fail (40) or (80) error.
CH000427 Floppy drive makes noise.
CH000447 Floppy door stuck or broken.
CH000496 How to determine what type of floppy drive I have?
CH000518 Receive a track error when reading, writing, or formatting a disk.
CH000579 Unable to read floppy diskette.
CH000684 The disk in drive A is not formatted. Do you want to format it now?
CH000727 How do I format a floppy diskette?
CH000823 How do I copy information to and from a floppy diskette or CD?
CH000854 How can I see all drives available on my computer?
CH000879 How do I determine how much space my floppy disk has?
CH000964 How do I insert a floppy diskette into the computer?
CH001027 Do airport X-rays damage flash media, floppy diskettes, or laptop computers?
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