Yeah, to work around the floppy drive quality issue, I installed six floppy drives in my system and use software RAID-5 so that when one of the floppy drives goes balls up I can simply hot-swap the failed floppy drive and rebuild the data that were located on the floppy diskette in the failed floppy drive. D * On Thu, Feb 01, 2001 at 08:33:53PM -0700, William Lindley wrote: > Back when floppy drives cost $500, they had some semblance of quality. > > Now that they're $11 at Fry's (that's $5 before markup, $1 before shipping > from Japan, and $.13 of materials) they are almost without fail ... prone > to fail. > > You might try using brand-new formatted disks. Be sure if you put a > floppy into a Windows box that you write-protect it, since Windows writes > on a disk even if you only do a directory! (It's updating the "Last > Access Time." Rah.) Thus merely reading a disk on someone else's machine > with a misaligned drive can trash the disk. > > \\/ > http://www.wlindley.com