Floppy Drive Types

written by: Ing. Peter Kukielka; article published: year 2006, month 08;


In: Categories » Computers and technology » Storage devices » Floppy Drive Types

As distinct from diskette types and formats, six drive types have been installed in PC-compatible systems:

5.25-inch 160/180 KB (SSDD)

Single-Sided, Double-Density(SSDD) was the standard FDD in very early PC-class systems. These drives read and write only SSDD diskettes.

5.25-inch 320/360 KB (DSDD)

Double-Sided, Double-Density(DSDD) was the standard FDD in PC-class systems, and was often found as a second FDD in early AT and 386 systems. These drives read and write single-sided (160/180 KB) and double-sided (320/360 KB) formats.

5.25-inch 1.2 MB (HD)

High-Density(HD)—this and all later formats are double-sided, but that part is no longer stated—is the standard FDD in 286, 386, and some early 486 systems, and is often found as a second FDD in early systems with 3.5-inch primary FDDs. These drives read and write any 5.25-inch format. A diskette previously formatted or written to by a 5.25-inch DD drive and then written to by a 5.25-inch HD drive may not subsequently be reliably readable in any 5.25-inch DD drive.

3.5-inch 720 KB (DD)

Double-Density (DD) is an interim standard, commonly found as a primary drive in early low-end 286 systems, and as a secondary drive in a few PC-class systems and many 286, 386, and 486 systems. These drives read and write only the 720 KB DD format.

3.5-inch 1.44 MB (HD)

High-Density (HD) is the standard FDD on mainstream systems for the past decade. These drives read, write, and format any 3.5-inch HD or DD diskette.

3.5-inch 2.88 MB (ED)

Extra-Density(ED) is a failed standard, introduced by IBM and now effectively obsolete. ED diskettes are very expensive—typically $3 each versus $0.25 for a 1.44 MB diskette—which doomed the format. These drives are difficult to find new nowadays, but can read, write, and format any 3.5-inch diskette in any format.

5.25-inch drives and 3.5-inch drives use different methods for write-protecting diskettes. 5.25-inch diskettes have a write-enable notch. To write-protect a 5.25-inch diskette, cover that notch with opaque tape. 3.5-inch diskettes have a write-protect hole with a sliding shutter. To write-protect a 3.5-inch diskette, slide the shutter to uncover the hole.

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