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Date   : Mon, 23 Mar 2009 12:01:20 EDT
From   : MarkWoobster@... (MarkWoobster@...)
Subject: Cleaning 5 1/4" drives

 
Thanks for the advice guys...will try to clean up the disc heads/  floppies
 
Mark. D
 
 
 
In a message dated 23/03/2009 14:09:32 GMT Standard Time,  
dominic@... writes:

Just to  add to this, I got a batch recently and I almost binned them after a
few  gentle rubs proved to be ineffective.

After a good few rather more  vigorous rubs then things started to improve!

Dom

-----Original  Message-----
From:  bbc-micro-bounces+dominic=brahms.demon.co.uk@...
[mailto:bbc-micro-bounces+dominic=brahms.demon.co.uk@...]  On
Behalf Of Jules Richardson
Sent: 22 March 2009 22:28
To:  bbc-micro@...
Subject: Re: [BBC-Micro] Cleaning 5 1/4"  drives

MarkWoobster@... wrote:
> Any way to clean a 5 1/4"  disc drive? in a way similar to a cleaning  
> cassette for tape  players or a cd cleaner for cd/dvd drives?

I usually use a cotton bud  soaked in a bit of isopropanol - pull any metal 
screening off the drive  and you should be able to get at the heads and lift 
them apart slightly.  Then *gently* wipe across the heads with the cotton bud
a 
few times,  rotating it slightly as you go.

The purer the isopropanol you can get,  the better - but I've found that in 
practice if you're reading disks with  high contamination then the drive will

need cleaning every few disks no  matter what (Boots likely sell 95% or 97% 
rubbing alcohol that'll do the  job).

If you've got seriously bad disks and are just interested in  reading them, 
taking the actual disc portion out of the jacket, washing in  warm water, 
drying and temporarily housing in a donor jacket can work  wonders - then
just 
toss the disc once you have the data off.

I  steer clear of 5.25" Parrot and Wabash disks if at all possible - I've
seen  
far more failures on them than anything else (in the sense that the binder  
holding the magnetic coating to the substrate's gone bad, rather than them  
just having a high error count - in one case it ripped the heads clean  out
of 
the drive when everything fouled up)

> I have just  repaired my old BBC B but i'm having a lot of problems getting

> any  discs to read. *cat shows the contents but most of the programs wont
work,  
> i  get disc errors.

Definitely not a media / drive  mismatch?

The other problem is that a lot of beebs are ex-schools and  the drives have 
often suffered a lot of abuse - to the point that the  alignment on them
isn't 
so  good...

cheers

Jules

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