ahh, the HP 9133A - the largest and heaviest external 3 1/2" floppy drive ever built.
-
@tubetime Does it take “common” 3,5” disks?
Or were there disks you could flip over?@nblr @tubetime Probably regular disks? But the earliest ones (I think just the OA-D30V but I’m not sure) used disks with a latching shutter. https://www.jamiecraig.com/early-floppy-disks/
I’m pretty sure there was never a flippable 3.5” disk.
-
and it tests good! the weird 26-pin HP interface is natively supported by my Floppy Exerciser board (https://github.com/schlae/FloppyExerciser)

@tubetime I think the 26-pin interface is actually just Sony’s original interface. It’s also on the D30/32’s used on the ACT Apricot.
-
and it tests good! the weird 26-pin HP interface is natively supported by my Floppy Exerciser board (https://github.com/schlae/FloppyExerciser)

@tubetime Neat seems HP was a fan of Sony drives, My HP1653B logic analyzer also has a Sony drive with HP specific interface though that one is 3.5 inch
-
@FurryBeta @tubetime 20MB, sister to the 40MB ST-251. I really liked them though the bearings certainly got noisy over time.
-
@FurryBeta @tubetime 20MB, sister to the 40MB ST-251. I really liked them though the bearings certainly got noisy over time.
-
Does that have HP-IB interface?
@vk3kri yes
-
and it tests good! the weird 26-pin HP interface is natively supported by my Floppy Exerciser board (https://github.com/schlae/FloppyExerciser)

on to the surprise hard drive. but, no surprise, it won't spin up and pulls a bunch of current on 12v. hmmm.

-
on to the surprise hard drive. but, no surprise, it won't spin up and pulls a bunch of current on 12v. hmmm.

the motor won't move. I think it is stiction. ugh.
-
whoops, surprise hard drive inside!
this one is a Seagate ST-506, a MFM drive with a whopping 5MB capacity!

@tubetime Dude, that is the OG Hard Drive there, ya gotta respect what it heralded in the years to come. I mean sure, you can get a short M.2 drive today that holds as much as a million of those drives could but hey, on a minicomputer or a CP/M system, it was So Much Space!
-
the floppy drive is the extremely ancient Sony OA-D31V-1. it's not the first one to come out. more like the second one.
@tubetime are these from the time that 3.5" disks had shutters with rounded apertures, and the shutters latched open? I remember some of my Dad's HP kit was like that
-
the motor won't move. I think it is stiction. ugh.
yeah all the heads are stuck. trying a heat gun now...
-
ahh, the HP 9133A - the largest and heaviest external 3 1/2" floppy drive ever built. let's get it working! 🧵
Hola AMIGO.
-
yeah all the heads are stuck. trying a heat gun now...
@tubetime Tap on the side with a hammer often sorted that.

-
yeah all the heads are stuck. trying a heat gun now...
it spins, but it sounds bad. not much hope for this drive, unfortunately.
-
it spins, but it sounds bad. not much hope for this drive, unfortunately.
the Gesswein MFM emulator was able to capture a flux transition dump! i used their mfm_util to analyze it, and it is a very odd format: check out the command line:
--format EC1841 --sectors 32,0 --heads 4 --cylinders 153 --header_crc 0x0,0xa00805,32,4 --data_crc 0x0,0xa00805,32,4 --sector_length 256
-
the Gesswein MFM emulator was able to capture a flux transition dump! i used their mfm_util to analyze it, and it is a very odd format: check out the command line:
--format EC1841 --sectors 32,0 --heads 4 --cylinders 153 --header_crc 0x0,0xa00805,32,4 --data_crc 0x0,0xa00805,32,4 --sector_length 256
example output of the analyze command... some bad sectors, but a lot of good ones!

-
example output of the analyze command... some bad sectors, but a lot of good ones!

output of 'strings' shows some cool stuff!

-
output of 'strings' shows some cool stuff!

the HPIB verification program for the HP5005B signature analyzer. wild
-
the motor won't move. I think it is stiction. ugh.
@tubetime I feel like knowing what stiction is, without looking it up, dates us.

-
yeah all the heads are stuck. trying a heat gun now...
@tubetime
Maybe it just needs some Head and Shoulders (TM).