
Wouldnt it be cheaper to just buy one of those floppy SD card jobbies?
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 15:37,
archived)

but no they're not cheaper. And not a substitute for a hard drive.
That one there was about £55 from Amazon. You can get cheaper than that though, you can get CF card interfaces with a 4Gb CF card for about £25. The Floppy drive emulator is £69. Generic PC ones are no good because it's a different interface.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 15:42,
archived)
That one there was about £55 from Amazon. You can get cheaper than that though, you can get CF card interfaces with a 4Gb CF card for about £25. The Floppy drive emulator is £69. Generic PC ones are no good because it's a different interface.

I had no idea SSDs had got so cheap...
I wouldnt mind one just for windows to live on.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 15:46,
archived)
I wouldnt mind one just for windows to live on.

which is more than I'll ever need. You can spend a lot on one for a PC, the price goes up exponentially with size. But you can get 128Gb for under £100 these days.
A 44 pin IDE one is obviously a bit more specialist, but it's industrial grade and SLC so it ought to last.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 15:49,
archived)
A 44 pin IDE one is obviously a bit more specialist, but it's industrial grade and SLC so it ought to last.

I don't think I'll be able to do the same with it
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:12,
archived)


The spring on my tape deck died a long time ago but I think that's basically fine. It's the video output is shafted. I actually have a +2 up there too where I think the tape deck's fucked but the video output is fine. Maybe I should take the two apart and play around with them when I'm staying with my parents over Christmas.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:49,
archived)

No, really. Common failing on the Amstrad drives is the drive belt perishing. Used to be able to get replacement ones on fleabay, if you're interested in fixing it.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 19:14,
archived)

I remember reading something about that...
Ahh primitive 80's elastic band technology.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 20:02,
archived)
Ahh primitive 80's elastic band technology.

instead of getting a rabbit, deciding you don't like it the way it is, pulling its guts out and replacing them and several of its limbs with those of a greyhound in order to make it run faster.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:23,
archived)

as I always have the loading on realtime.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:21,
archived)

and I actually prefer my Amiga to my PC. I'd emulate my PC on my Amiga rather than the other way round, if that were possible.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:28,
archived)

is actually made by an ST enthusiast, so yes it definitely works for that.
I don't know what STs have hard-drive wise but there's a lot going on in the ST scene these days I believe.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:19,
archived)
I don't know what STs have hard-drive wise but there's a lot going on in the ST scene these days I believe.

I assumed you'd replaced the floppy with an SSD, but maybe not.
The ST has some weird non-standard stuff going on with external floppies or hard drives. I don't know which would make more sense to hack, but I'd rather leave the floppy drive itself alone. I gather things can be done with the cartridge port, but I think you still need a boot disk to enable whatever it is it can do.
I already use a CF adaptor for my Speccies.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 16:56,
archived)
The ST has some weird non-standard stuff going on with external floppies or hard drives. I don't know which would make more sense to hack, but I'd rather leave the floppy drive itself alone. I gather things can be done with the cartridge port, but I think you still need a boot disk to enable whatever it is it can do.
I already use a CF adaptor for my Speccies.

to take standard 44-pin IDE laptop hard disks. This flash module is designed as a drop-in replacement for exactly that kind of hard disk, so it's quite easy. Although I did have to file a little bit off the edge of the RF modulator for it to physically fit.
The older Amiga 500s had external hard drives, I have no idea what was inside of them.
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Tue 11 Dec 2012, 17:05,
archived)
The older Amiga 500s had external hard drives, I have no idea what was inside of them.