roy@gatech.UUCP (Roy J. Mongiovi) (12/12/83)
I believe that the Victor 9000 achieves its tremendous (1.2 MB versus 360 KB on the IBM PC) increase in density due to several factors: 1) The diskettes are written at 96 TPI rather than 48. 2) The diskette rotational speed is varied to allow the outer tracks to be as dense as the inner tracks. 3) Group encoding is used to store data on the diskette, thus eliminating sync pulses. Now you can get around the 96/48 TPI problem (for reading, not writing) by simply reading every other track, and I believe that there is a drive speed per track vector that can be reprogrammed to keep the rotational speed constant. But I don't see any way that you can read diskettes that were not written using group encoding since that is a function of the analog part of the disk drive. -- "Roy J. Mongiovi" USA: School of ICS, Georgia Institute of Technology. Atlanta, GA 30332 uucp: ...!{sb1,allegra,ut-ngp}!gatech!roy ...!duke!mcnc!msdc!gatech!roy CSNet: Roy@GaTech ARPA: Roy.GaTech@CSNet-Relay