donk@dadla.WR.TEK.COM (Donald C. Kirkpatrick) (06/11/90)
Lately there have been a few requests for "where can I get ....." There is at least one company that still proudly proclaims "World's #1 CP/M Products Supplier." Central Computer Products 330 Central Avenue Fillmore, CA 93015 (805)524-4189 They still sell C/NIX, C/80, GRAMMATIK, spreadsheet programs, games, and much more. For $3 they will send you a catalog. I have no connection with them (except as a very satisfied customer.) Now to change the subject. I though I'd chip in my two cents worth on the Western Digital disk controllers are better/worse that the 765 FDC discussion. Some people may have already discovered that a disk formatted via a Western controller sometimes cannot be read by a 765. This is because the Western disk controllers format 10 bytes of FF and 6 bytes of 00 in gap 2 while the 765 formats 11 bytes of FF and 6 bytes of 00 (as per the standard.) This difference can cause the 765 to miss the data address mark. Whether or not this happens depends on how good the PLL is. The Western controllers, having shorted the gap, enable the PLL earlier. The 765 does not know the gap is substandard short and so does not enable the PLL in time. My 765 also can have trouble reading the first sector on a track when the disk is formatted on a foreign system. The 765 is sensitive to the location of the index pulse w.r.t. that first sector. My fix to this problem is: when I find such a disk, I enable a Flip-Flop on my controller card to divide-by-two the incoming index pulses. This causes two revolutions per index pulse and on the second pass, where there is no index pulse, the 765 reads the first sector just fine. -- -Don Kirkpatrick (donk@dadla.LA.TEK.COM) UUCP: {ihnp4 | decvax | ucbvax}!tektronix!dadla!donk ARPA: donk%dadla.LA.TEK.COM@RELAY.CS.NET