Floppy Drive Installation

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Motherboards have one floppy connector, and many newer motherboards support only one floppy drive. A computer can have no more than two floppy drives. About the only need these days for two floppy drives is if the user has 5.25-inch disks to access. In this case, the 3.5-inch drive should be A and the 5.25-inch should be B. A small power connector (see Figure 6.14) is used for 3.5-inch floppy drives. A standard floppy drive ribbon cable has three connectors: one for A, one for B, and one for the motherboard connector (see Figure 6.15). You’ll see that a floppy cable has a twist. The twist should be nearest the A drive. If there is some compelling reason to switch drive letters, such as having to use the B drive as a boot drive (only A can be a boot drive), this should be possible in the BIOS. The other option is to change jumpers, but they differ from drive to drive and tend to be confusing.

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Figure 6.14: The large connector is for hard drives, optical drives, and 5.25-inch floppy drives. The small connector is only for 3.5-inch floppy drives.
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Figure 6.15: One floppy cable with a twist.
Note The data connectors for 5.25-inch floppy drives are not the same as those for 3.5-inch drives. If you need to install a 5.25-inch floppy drive, you’ll need a floppy cable with a choice of two connectors to use for the B drive. That type of cable allows connection of either a 3.5-inch or a 5.25-inch device as the B drive. Remember, the A drive is always the one nearest the twist in the cable.

Just about every case has a space dedicated to a floppy drive. Look for a 3.5-inch bay that corresponds to an opening in the front of the case (shown in Figure 6.16). Just as in hard drives, you’ll have to match up pins 1. Pin 1 on the cable has a stripe, and there will be some type of marking on the drive as shown in Figure 6.17, and on the motherboard, as shown in Figure 6.18. The drive markings can be cryptic, but know that if pins 0 és 34 are marked, pin 1 will be next to pin 0, and on the opposite side from pin 34. Other drives have only a red mark. Once you ascertain which side pin 1 is on, it is a good idea to mark it on the drive with a fine-tipped permanent marker. However, damage won’t occur if you make a mistake with the data cable; if the floppy drive light stays on continuously, it means that one end of the data cable is in backward.

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Figure 6.16: A bay usable for floppy drive.
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Figure 6.17: Pin 1 markings can be vague.
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Figure 6.18: Pin 1 marking on the motherboard.

Finally, make sure that the BIOS is set correctly for the floppy drive(s) in the system.

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Floppy Disk Drives (Diskette) áttekintés

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Floppy drives were the original storage drive type in PCs. The IBM PC, circa 1981, had two 5.25-inch floppy drives, each with a capacity of 360KB. There were no other storage devices. 1.2MB versions of these came out years later, and the 3.5-inch version that we use today came out after that. There was an attempt to circulate 2.88MB floppies, but they really didn’t catch on.

These days, floppy drives are on their way out, although the vast majority of new computers still come with them, with the exception being notebooks. While many of the most common uses for floppies have been taken over by CD-RWs, removable hard drives, Zip drives, and network connections, at the moment, floppies are still essential for tasks such as starting computers that won’t boot otherwise, or running programs such as disk utilities that can’t run in Windows. This is because the drivers to run floppy disks are included on all BIOS chips, meaning that floppy disks can run as soon as the BIOS gets to them. More recently, however, this has become true for optical drives as well.

Selecting a Floppy Drive

New floppy drives available today are nearly all good quality. If the case has an opening that shows the entire floppy faceplate, as shown in Figure 6.12, the only consideration is that the color of the faceplate matches the computer case, if that is important to the user. Many cases, however, have openings for proprietary floppy drives, an example of which is shown in Figure 6.13. In this case, if you have a selection of used drives, you can try to match up a faceless drive, such as the one shown in Figure 6.13, or try to order a new drive from the case or computer manufacturer.

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Figure 6.12: Standard opening, standard drive.
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Figure 6.13: Proprietary opening, proprietary drive.

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Removable Storage Devices

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There are several different types of removable storage devices. We discussed removable full-sized hard drives in the section on RAID. There are additional uses for these. One is for drives containing data only (no OS or programs) that can be easily switched from machine to machine, although networks usually do that job. Another use is as an easy way to switch OSs on a single computer, a job usually done by setting up the different OSs on different partitions.

USB and FireWire (IEEE 1394) Drives

USB and FireWire are external drives that connect easily into the appropriate port. They are especially good for backup and transferring large amounts of data from one machine to another without using a network connection, and they are hot-swappable (consult the manual to be sure). These take drive letters, just as internal hard drives. They cost a bit more than internal drives because of the housing and external power supply. When installing one of these drives, make sure you follow the directions exactly, especially order of installation. You can expect problems if you don’t. If you are asked to get one of these drives working after someone installed it incorrectly, you’ll have to uninstall the drive and start over again.

PC-Card (PCMCIA) Hard Drives

PC-Card hard drives are credit card sized drives that fit into the appropriate Type II or III PC-Card slots on notebook computers and the occasional full-sized computer. Recent models by Kingston (kingston.com) and other companies hold several gigabytes of data. However, because of their extraordinarily small size, they don’t have much buffer, so they are good mainly for data archiving on notebooks. These drives are usually easy to set up and they do get a drive letter from the system. They are also hot-swappable, but if Windows is running, make sure to stop the device by clicking the Eject or Unplug Device icon in Windowssystem tray, or in the Add/Remove Hardware wizard (or equivalent depending on Windows version) in Control Panel. Failure to stop a PC-Card device before ejecting it can damage the device.

Microdrives

Microdrives are even smaller drives used in certain computers and digital cameras. A Hitachi (hgst.com) 4GB drive using a single 1-inch platter should be coming on the market as this book is released. There are adapters available to plug microdrives into PC-Card slots.

Tip When formatting an external hard drive, take into account the different computers in which it might be used. You wouldn’t want to format a drive as NTFS if it will be shared with a notebook running Windows 9x.

Flash Memory Cards

Flash memory is memory that doesn’t need continuous power to maintain its data. Therefore, it can be used in place of a disk drive. Flash memory has the advantage over disk drives of having no moving parts, so it is much more resistant to damage than the spinning platters and fast-moving heads of a hard drive. If flash memory eventually gets to the point where it exceeds the speed of hard drives for a comparable cost, it will possibly replace hard drives and possibly all disk drives. Flash memory is also adaptable to PC-Card slots.

Diagnosing Removable Storage Device Problems

These devices can fail just as regular hard drives can. Follow all drive troubleshooting instructions that apply to these devices. Moreover, with the USB and FireWire drives, drivers could be a problemeither the driver could be corrupted or the installer didn’t follow the instructions. Uninstall the device and reinstall the drivers, making sure to follow the directions to the letter. for more information on device drivers.
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