[net.micro.cbm] 1meg drive

rmd@vilya.UUCP (MACDONALD) (09/07/85)

has anyone purchased that 1 meg drive from Protecto?.
Would like to know how it works compared to the 1541.
One other point - I have never had a disk go bad until
last week, I could not load a file listed in the directory.
I had not used the save with replace command and think
that the cause might be leaving the disk on top of the 
drive with the heat doing it in.

sbp@panda.UUCP (Brown Pulliam) (09/09/85)

In article <196@vilya.UUCP> rmd@vilya.UUCP (MACDONALD) writes:
>has anyone purchased that 1 meg drive from Protecto?.
>Would like to know how it works compared to the 1541.

The Drive referred to is the Commodore SFD-1001. It appears to
have been designed after the 1541 to be their high end floppy
drive, and comes in a case the same size and shape as the 1541.
Apparently, they decided not to market it as a regular product,
to concentrate on the 1571, Amiga, etc, so unloaded the lot
to Protecto and at least one other company in Denver. Mine
has a serial number in the 5000 s.

The SFD-1001 uses a format very similar to the older Commodore
8250 drive, and in fact the manual I received was written in
1982 for the older line of drives (4040, 8050, and 8250). This
puts slightly over half a megabyte on each side of a 5 1/4 in.
floppy. I'm told that good quality double sided, double density
disks will work with this drive, but the local surplus house
(UNITECH in Campbidge, MA) sells what they call a Quad Density
DS disk for about $12/ten, and these definitly work well. The
drive has upper and lower R/W heads, so the floppy case only
has one notch. NOTE, the SFD-1001 is not R/W compatible with
disks formatted on the 8250.

The drive requires a IEEE interface, which Protecto sells for
about $70. with the drive and one person I know bought that
and is satisfied with it. My own interface is the RTC C Link,
a somewhat more expensive gadget which I had been using to
connect between my C-64 and my 4040 Dual Drive. This also
works well with the SFD-1001, and is probably a little faster
because unlike the Commodore and BusCard interfaces that
connect through the Serial Port, the C Cink uses the Expan-
sion (parallel) Port. Disk access speeds are, as you would
expect, the same as with my 4040, which is 6 to 10 times
faster than the 1541.

I made a piggy back (24 pin Blue Ribbon to 24 pin Blue Ribbon)
jumper cable to connect the SFD to the 4040, and had no trou-
ble using the utility program supplied to make one answer as
Drive 8, and the other as Drive 9. Now all I have to do is
figure out what I'm going to do when faced with 4100 Blocks
Free !
			Brown