On 04/06/2016 10:20 AM, Swift Griggs wrote:
When left in an unprotected state, or a poor environment, damp, mold and
dust can damage the surface, either degrading the magnetic layer or
causing the gap to shrink enough that the drive head physically damages
the disk?
Gap? There IS no gap on a standard floppy. The head contacts the media surface. (Bernoulli drives did have a gap, and spun at a much higher RPM.)

But, on most single-sided floppies, there was a felt pad that pressed the media against the head. The only gap might be when the head load solenoid is de-energized, the pad retracts and the media pulls away from the surface. That was used on the old drives with AC motors that spun the disk all the time.

Most double-sided drives pinched the media between the two heads, and the DC motor shut off when there was no reading/writing for a while.

I'll go way off the rails and say that I beleive it's mostly due to
oxidization of the ferromagnetic particles on the floppy itself. I've also
heard smarter people than me claim that some floppies used "binders" for the
particles on the disk which are attractive to some forms of mold.


All floppies and magnetic tapes have some kind of binder to hold the oxide to the backing, and it does deteriorate over time. Ozone and other air pollution probably makes it go bad faster.

Jon

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