> On Dec 5, 2021, at 2:07 PM, Gregory McGill <arcadeshop...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Someone has,  its back in the scroll somewhere it works fine with ff

I remember seeing this go by, too.  Found it!  Jerry gave an excellent detailed 
write up:

> From: Jerry Davis <je...@txdavis.com>
> Date: May 24, 2021 at 9:32:32 AM PDT
> To: m...@bitchin100.com
> Subject: Re: [M100] DVI + Floppy Emulation
> Reply-To: m...@bitchin100.com
> 
> 
> Yes.  I attached one to my DVI a few weeks ago.
> 
> I purchased a Gotek SFR1M44-U100 from Amazon.  The Gotek is a 3.5" drive 
> format.  To mount the Gotek into the 5.25" drive bay that the DVI has I also 
> purchased the following:
> 
> (1) Startek 3.5" to 5.25" front bay adapter (Amazon)
> (1) Kentek 6" adapter from 4-Pin Male Molex 5.25" drive power connector to 
> 4-pin Female 3.5" drive power connector (Amazon)
> (1) 34-Pin Card Edge to IDC Connector Adapter - 5.25" to 3.5" Floppy Cable 
> (eBay)
> (1) Gigastone Z90 32GB USB 3.1 Flash Drive (Amazon)
> 
> The flash drive I purchased is very short.  I didn't want a USB drive 
> sticking way out from the front because it gets in the way.  32GB is massive 
> overkill in terms of space for disk images but that's what was available in a 
> small package for a good price.
> 
> I installed the latest version of "flashfloppy" by Keir Fraser (and many 
> other contributors) onto the Gotek using the instructions on the flashfloppy 
> Githib Wiki.  The Gotek I received had the Artery chip installed which 
> required a special build at first but I believe is now supported on the 
> newest builds.  I saw a note on the flashfloppy discussion board that folks 
> were having fewer problems with Artery-based Gotek drives when using flash 
> drives supporting USB 3.1.  That's why I made sure I bought a USB drive with 
> USB 3.1.  That may be the standard today so getting USB 3.1 may be 
> unavoidable.
> 
> I loaded the flashfloppy software onto the Gotek using the instructions and 
> Youtube links contained in the flashfloppy Github Wiki.  Some Gotek hardware 
> versions have to be programmed with a USB-to-TTL cable attached to header 
> pins you soldered to the Gotek board, other hardware versions could be 
> programmed using only a USB-to-USB cable.  The Gotek hardware is subject to 
> change so be sure to check the Wiki for the hardware version you receive.  
> There is a lot of information on Gotek programming and hardware upgrades that 
> will help get you going on Youtube.
> 
> To start, I kept the original 180K floppy installed as Drive 0 and the Gotek 
> installed as Drive 1.  I copied the DOS system disk over to the Gotek and 
> then reversed the drives.  My DVI now boots from the Gotek, and the physical 
> floppy drive is available for creating floppy images from physical media.  
> Switching between the system disk and an application disk is done by pushing 
> the image selector buttons and cycling through the images on the flash drive.
> 
> The hardware upgrades available for the Gotek include adding an LCD display 
> and a rotary encoder.  I didn't do any of these as I wanted to make sure I 
> could get the stock Gotek running before attempting any modifications.  I may 
> go back to these at a later date. 
> 
> My FF.CFG which configures flashfloppy features is mostly stock and contains 
> the following entries:
> 
> interface = ibmpc
> host = unspecified
> pin02 = nc
> pin34 = nc
> write-protect = no
> side-select-glitch-filter = 0
> track-change = instant
> write-drain = instant
> index-suppression = yes
> head-settle-ms = 12
> motor-delay = ignore
> chgrst = step
> ejected-on-startup = no
> image-on-startup = last
> display-probe-ms = 3000
> autoselect-file-secs = 2
> autoselect-folder-secs = 2
> folder-sort = always
> sort-priority = folders
> nav-mode = default
> nav-loop = yes
> twobutton-action = zero
> rotary = none
> indexed-prefix = "DSKA"
> display-type = auto
> oled-font = 6x13
> oled-contrast = 143
> display-order = default
> display-off-secs = 60
> display-on-activity = yes
> display-scroll-rate = 200
> display-scroll-pause = 2000
> nav-scroll-rate = 80
> nav-scroll-pause = 300
> step-volume = 10
> da-report-version = ""
> extend-image = yes
> 
> My IMG.CFG file which defines the cylinders, heads, and sectors for the 180K 
> disk format used by the DVI looks like:
> 
> [*.m100dvi.img]
> cyls=40
> heads=1
> secs=18
> bps=256
> h=0
> 
> The configuration above works for me but could probably be tuned for better 
> performance.  I was able to format virtual disk images, write files to the 
> images, and read files from the images with no issues.  The DVI DOS copy and 
> backup utilities all worked as expected.
> 
> Hope this helps you.
> 
> Jerry
> 
> 
>> On Sun, May 23, 2021, 7:21 AM Dan Eicher <daneiche...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>> Anyone using a GoTek or HxC floppy emulator with a Tandy DVI?

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