ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
I still have a floppy drive in my PC. The thing kept pitching error fits during the rebuild when my friend tried to make it without one. My aunt still has a box of the larger floppy floppies (no, I don't know the actual size, I just know they were the size of thing she used to teach me on when I was like, seven,) on top of her computer hutch. Haven't had a computer that could take the damn things in years.
Such a hoarder. Damn things have probably lost all semblance of data coherancy. She handed me a few of the small floppies a month or two ago, asked me to try checking them to see what they were; they were labled, but she wanted to know. Surprise of surprises, the system didn't recognize them as formatted.
Bleh. Filed those right in the circular file.
I don't know why your computer would not work without a floppy drive. If you mark the floppy type as "none" in BIOS and disconnect the data and power cables, there's absolutely no reason why it would not work.
Your aunt's "larger" floppies were probably 5¼", since you would have to be well over thirty for them to be 8". 8" floppies were mostly used in minicomputers anyways, and I bet your aunt did not have one of those. Though, if I remember correctly, there were some very early CP/M personal computers which had 8" floppy drives, but I'm too lazy to check that right now, so don't quote me on that. In any case 8" floppies were already obsolescent in the early days of personal computers, that is in the early 1980s.
The funny thing about floppy drive data coherency is the fact that the head calibration of floppy drives is entirely mechanical and so there is no automatic calibration during use whatsoever. This means that a floppy disk might be only readable with the drive it was originally written with. I have encountered this problem numerous times during the late 1990s, when floppy drives were still commonly in use but many of the floppies were already several years old. You can never be sure that the disk is unreadable with
all drives unless you have tried to read it with at least five different drives, and even then a possibility still remains that some other drive might have skewed enough calibration to read it...