Well from pictures I found online at https://www.ebay.com/itm/315148732505 it would seem that the A model just said "9114" on the front however the serial number label on the bottom says 9114A.

Paul.

On 2024-05-01 4:39 a.m., Mike Stein via cctalk wrote:
Thanks, Paul,

I'm aware of the 9114A and B versions and some of the differences, but I'm
wondering whether my 9114 is identical to the 9114A.

Is it maybe like World War I  which was just 'The Great War' until WW
II came along; same war, different name.

m

On Wed, May 1, 2024 at 12:38 AM Paul Berger via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:

As Mike said there are two models 9114A and 9114B, they are functionally
equivalent, however the B model uses a 1/2 high drive mechanism and I
believe there are changes to the controller as well, but I have only
seen the inside of a B model.

Paul.

On 2024-04-30 8:29 p.m., Mike Katz via cctalk wrote:
I am not familiar with a 9114 only the 9114A and 9114B.

On 4/30/2024 6:15 PM, Mike Stein wrote:
Just wondering: I see 9114 and 9114A being used interchangeably (mine
are 9114s); are they the same or actually different drives?

m


On Tue, Apr 30, 2024 at 5:39 PM Mike Katz via cctalk
<cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:

     Thank you for your help.

     That is the command I am using on the 41 to try and format the disk.
     With a directory size of 60.

     On 4/30/2024 4:22 PM, Wayne S via cctalk wrote:
     > Also this article refers to a set of commands for this drive.
     The NEWM command formats a new disk.
     > Link is
https://www.hpmuseum.org/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/hpmuseum/articles.cgi?read=78
     >
     >
     > Sent from my iPhone
     >
     > On Apr 30, 2024, at 14:07, Wayne S <wayne.su...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
     >
     > What kind of floppies did Hp recommend to use with this drive?
     >
     > Sent from my iPhone
     >
     > On Apr 30, 2024, at 13:55, Fred Cisin via cctalk
     <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
     >
     > On Tue, 30 Apr 2024, John Herron via cctalk wrote:
     > Yup, that's all I used to do. Some scotch tape over the floppy
     disk hole to
     > make the system see it as DD. If it didn't automatically format
     as 720, you
     > could specify size or sector count with format.com
     <http://format.com> in dos.
     >
     > Somemedia sensors are optical; use opaque taps.
     >
     > I did hear folks say it wasn't always reliable (similar to 5.25
     disks being
     > formated on a high density drive) but I never saw any problems
in my
     > limited use.
     >
     > 3.5" are 600 VS 750 oersted;
     > 5.25" are 300 vs 600 Oersted;
     > a low density 5.25 formatted as "high density" won't do well;
     > a high density 5.25" (1.2M) formatted as low density ("360K")
     sill self erase VERY soon, sometimes before you can even get it
     over to another machine.  We had a college purchasing agent in bed
     with "Roytype", who kept giving us "1.2M" floppies ofr out TRS80s;
     they self erased very soon.
     >
     > --
     > Grumpy Ol' Fred ci...@xenosoft.com

Reply via email to