I've been contemplating a floppy diskette drive emulator with features to make 
it fit better into systems using 50-pin Shugart style floppy drive interfaces 
vs. the other emulators already on the market. Studying manuals for various 8" 
floppy diskette drives, I see that they generally provided a great deal of 
configurability. There are the myriad of jumper-selectable options which change 
drive behavior for compatibility with various computers. Then there are 
features like FM data separators which are present on some, but not all, 
drives. And then there are many documented "cut this trace, then bodge wire 
this signal to pin X of the edge connector" options for special purposes such 
as individual drive motor controls, simultaneous monitoring of all four drive 
ready signals, etc.

Since fully supporting all of the options I've seen documented would have real 
hardware cost and add complexity to the design, I'm wondering just how much of 
that configurability is really necessary. Which non-default options are really 
needed for system still in use and/or in the hands of collectors? Which were 
only ever provided for some obscure industrial system manufacturer, with no 
surviving systems in existence? Which were included just in case somebody might 
need them, but were never used in practice?

I'd appreciate it if anybody can provide insight into this, such as examples of 
systems which required non-omnipresent and/or non-default configuration options.

-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <n...@nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/

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