Let's make a new 3.5" Floppy Drive cleaning Disk (Mk II), a thread π§΅:
So, the last few cleaning disks I've made, were based on Laboratory Filters, they're hard wearing but probably slightly too abrasive.
I found this link to an early 1980's cleaning disk patent: patents.google.com/patent/US43778β¦
Here we go, the recommended material to use is:
Tyvek
Tyvek is a brand of synthetic flashspun high-density polyethylene fibers and the ideal candidate for floppy drive head cleaning.
Let's begin, here's what we need:
- A sheet of Tyvek
- A floppy disk (these ones were all sliced by the previous owner for data protection)
- Craft Knife & Scissors
- Superglue
- Pencil & Compass
First pop off the metal slide and take out the spring:
Next, carefully use a knife on the corners of the disk to open the case:
Then peel the magnetic disk off the metal spindle, we need the spindle. Then remove the fabric lining, which ironically is probably Tyvek.
Use the magnetic disk as a guide, if you have a compass, that's a good option too, but mark and cut out the disk shape on your sheet of Tyvek.
Mines not perfect, but it's slightly larger than the magnetic and fits in the guides.
Apply tiny amounts of Superglue and attach Spindle:
Apply small amounts of Superglue to the corners, where you snapped it open and then reassemble the floppy disk.
I printed a label out for mine, for no apparent reason, other than liking labels π
Now to test it out, apply a small amount of Isopropyl Alcohol, not too much, but make sure it covers the area of the window.
My Olivetti Prodest PC1's B drive is dirty, sometimes it has issues reading disks, so I thought this would be a good candidate to test it out on.
B> DIR
"General Failure error reading drive B"
In the cleaning disk goes, to work its magic:
Well it worked a treat, the drive heads are now clean and working well π
Mission complete, now to make a few of them, thanks for following along with the thread π§΅πΎπ
@threadreaderapp unroll
β’ β’ β’
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
The Toshiba T19xx series laptops, lovely 486 machines, but they all suffer from a problem, or will do, eventually!
πΎ *-Belt Driven Floppy Drive of Doom-* πΎ
Let's explore and see if I can sort this one out, maybe do some other bits as well! π§΅
Current state of play, the floppy belt has either stretched or snapped, meaning you're not going to have much fun, the HDD is not exactly easy to get to.
If you're going to embark on this journey, you will have to COMPLETELY take this puppy apart to get to the floppy drive. I have a few of these and have taken them apart about 50 times, probably do it in my sleep and the harder part - put it all back. π
IBM OS/2 Warp 4 has a floppy install version, it has 40, yes π F-O-R-T-Y Floppy disks πΎ.
That's just the install, in total there's 101 floppy disks, including drivers and software.
So, as I'm a nutcase and enjoy doing pointless things, I'm going to install it on my 486 machine.
---Installing OS/2 Warp 4---
--OS/2 Warp is Inviting--
OS/2 Warp has been designed with a user interface that will appeal to you. The carefully designed icons, bitmaps, pointers, and cursors provide an intuitive way for you to interact with your system.
So the install has 40 floppy disks, but you have to use 1 to about 11 twice to get to this stage!
New Thread π§΅
Compaq Contura Aero 4/25 486 laptop (1994).
Cost me Β£12, it needs repairs to the screen bracket & a clean. Also I have no idea if it will work, additionally it has no PCMCIA floppy drive. BIOS info stored on a hidden partition on the HDD, no floppy = problems
I've used an 18v PSU, we seem to have some life π dudes!
Wow, the 171MB Seagate HDD is still working and it boots into MS-DOS 5.0. There's some 'interesting' names batch files on here π€£π€£π€£
New thread:
Nintendo Gameboy DMG-01 Refurb(s).
GB No1 Left - Works sometimes, no buttons are working (apart from the power switch). Needs a clean and a new screen lens.
GB No2 Right - Screen issues. Needs a clean and a new screen lens.
GB No1 - I've confirmed the issue with the buttons, also cleaned the cart slot, that seems to have fixed the inconsistent cart loading. I've opened it up and you can see exactly what's up with the buttons straight away, can you spot the problem?
Yep, it has a crack and it goes through to the top button layer.
Easy "anyone can do with minimal effort" Retro-brighting tutorial:
I have been asked many times how I retro-bright things, so I wanted to share the method I used, that's very simple, requires no special tech and gives fantastic results.
(Use relevant PPE, gloves etc.)
Thread:
All you need to purchase is:
1οΈβ£ Cling Flim / Saran Wrap
2οΈβ£ 12% Hair Blonding Peroxide Cream, I use JEROME RUSSELL Bblonde (40 Vol)
I do this inside my house, so a window sill out of the way that you can leave something on for a while is recommended.
Step 1:
Dismantle the item that you want to retro-bright, it's important that you remove electronic components and are left with the outer shell only. πͺ