PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 3nd Edition Free Open Book

PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 3nd Edition

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6.1 Diskette Types and Formats

Before a diskette can be used to store data, you must prepare it by formatting it, although many diskettes nowadays come preformatted. Formatting creates the physical tracks and sectors that the drive uses to store data (called low-level or physical formatting) and the logical structure used by the operating system to organize that data (called logical or DOS formatting). Unlike hard disks, which require two separate formatting passes, FDDs perform both physical and logical formatting in one step. Also unlike hard disks, diskettes do not need to be partitioned.

The Quick Format option available in Windows and later versions of DOS doesn't really format the diskette. It simply "zeros out" the File Allocation Tables and Root Directory entries, giving the appearance of a freshly formatted diskette but using the original format. Because data on diskettes fades with time, your data will be much safer if you do an actual format, which does a surface test and refreshes the physical and logical format structure of the diskette. Use Quick Format only on diskettes that have recently had a full format done on them. Also, do not count on a Quick Format to wipe sensitive data from a diskette. It's trivially easy to recover such data. To wipe data, do a full format on the diskette. Better yet, use a wipe utility, or bulk-erase the diskette. You have been warned.

To format a diskette with Windows, right-click the drive icon in My Computer or Explorer, choose Format, and mark the appropriate options. At the command line, format a diskette by typing the command format a: /options, where a: is the drive letter of the FDD, and /options controls how the disk will be formatted. The available options and the required syntax vary according to the version of DOS or Windows you use. Type format /? to display available formatting options. Which options are usable depends upon both the FDD type and the diskette type. Some FDDs accept only one type of diskette, while others accept two or more.

To format a diskette with Linux, run kfloppy (the KDE Floppy Formatter, shown in Figure 6-1) or gfloppy, the Gnome equivalent. Choose the appropriate size, filesystem, and other options, and then click the Format button. If you prefer a command line, mformat is convenient for formatting DOS floppies. The mdir and mcopy utilities are Linux equivalents for the DOS dir and copy commands, but with additional features.

Figure 6-1. The KDE Floppy Formatter avoids having to mount the diskette or remember command-line options
figs/pcn3_0601.gif

For about a decade, the 3.5-inch High-Density (HD) FDD has been standard. However, you may encounter older types of FDDs and diskettes when upgrading an old machine or salvaging data, so it's worth knowing something about these obsolescent and obsolete formats. Table 6-1 lists the various diskette formats that have been supported on the IBM platform over the years.

Table 6-1. Diskette characteristics
 

5.25-inch formats

3.5-inch formats

 

SSDD

DSDD

HD

DD

HD

ED

Formatted capacity (KB)

160 / 180

320 / 360

1200

720

1440

2880

Media descriptor byte

0xFE / 0xFC

0xFF / 0xFD

0xF9

0xF9

0xF0

0xF0

Bytes/Sector

512

512

512

512

512

512

Sectors/Track

8 / 9

8 / 9

15

9

18

36

Tracks/Side

40

40

80

80

80

80

Sides

1

2

2

2

2

2

Sectors/Disk

320 / 360

640 / 720

2,400

1,440

2,880

5,760

Available sectors/Disk

313 / 351

630 / 708

2,371

1,426

2,847

5,726

Tracks/Inch (TPI)

48 / 48

48 / 48

96

135

135

135

Track width (inch/mm)

.0118/.300

.0118 /.300

.0061/.155

.0045/.115

.0045/.115

.0045/.115

Bits/Inch (BPI)

5,876

5,876

9,646

8,717

17,434

34,868

Media formulation

Ferrite

Ferrite

Cobalt

Cobalt

Cobalt

Barium

Coercivity (Oersteds)

300 / 300

300 / 300

600

600

720

750

Sectors/Cluster

1

2

1

2

1

2

FAT type

12-bit

12-bit

12-bit

12-bit

12-bit

12-bit

FAT length (Sectors)

1 / 2

1 / 2

7

3

9

9

Root directory (Sectors)

4 / 4

7 / 7

14

7

14

15

Root directory entries

64 / 64

112 / 112

224

112

224

240

In addition to the standard formats described in Table 6-1, Microsoft has used the proprietary DMF (Distribution Media Format) for some distribution diskettes. DMF increases the capacity of a standard high-density 3.5-inch diskette by reducing the inter-sector gap to allow 21 sectors/track rather than the standard 18 sectors/track, thereby expanding capacity to a true 1.64 MB (usually called 1.68, 1.7, or 1.72 MB).

On most systems, you cannot read data from or write data to DMF diskettes directly because DIR, DISKCOPY, and other standard disk utilities do not recognize DMF. In fact, attempting to use DISKCOPY to copy a DMF diskette not only yields an unreadable target diskette, but also may actually damage the DMF source diskette. DMF diskettes are readable only by Setup and other Microsoft utilities designed to work with CAB files (the compressed Cabinet files used for software distribution), as well as by some third-party utilities such as WinZip (http://www.winzip.com), which allows you to extract data directly from compressed CAB files, and WinImage (http://www.winimage.com), which allows you to format and copy DMF diskettes directly.

Fortunately, most software is now distributed on CD or DVD discs, so DMF diskettes are seldom used nowadays. We say fortunately because in our experience DMF diskettes are much more likely than standard 1.44 MB diskettes to generate read errors. We have frequently found DMF diskettes that were unreadable straight out of the box, and a DMF diskette that is several years old is very likely to be unreadable. A standard diskette was simply never intended to store that much data.

If you encounter an unreadable DMF diskette, we recommend using WinImage to attempt to extract the CAB files manually to the hard disk. If one FDD consistently generates read errors, the diskette may be readable on a different drive, at least well enough to let you extract the CAB files.

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         Main Menu
    Main Page
    Table of content
    Dedication
    Copyright
    Foreword
    Preface
    Chapter 1. Fundamentals
    Chapter 2. Working on PCs
    Chapter 3. Motherboards
    Chapter 4. Processors
    Chapter 5. Memory
    Chapter 6. Floppy Disk Drives
    6.1 Diskette Types and Formats
    6.2 Drive Types
    6.3 FDD Interface and Cabling
    6.4 Installing an FDD
    6.5 Working with FDDs
    6.6 Working with Obsolete Diskette Formats
    6.7 Salvaging Diskette Data
    6.8 Our Picks
    Chapter 7. High-Capacity Floppy Disk Drives
    Chapter 8. Removable Hard Disk Drives
    Chapter 9. Tape Drives
    Chapter 10. CD-ROM Drives
    Chapter 11. CD Writers
    Chapter 12. DVD Drives
    Chapter 13. Hard Disk Interfaces
    Chapter 14. Hard Disk Drives
    Chapter 15. Video Adapters
    Chapter 16. Displays
    Chapter 17. Sound Adapters
    Chapter 18. Speakers and Headphones
    Chapter 19. Keyboards
    Chapter 20. Mice and Trackballs
    Chapter 21. Game Controllers
    Chapter 22. Serial Communications
    Chapter 23. Parallel Communications
    Chapter 24. USB Communications
    Chapter 25. Cases
    Chapter 26. Power Supplies
    Chapter 27. Backup Power Supplies
    Chapter 28. Building a PC
    Colophon
    Index


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