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- From: jeff@cbis.ece.drexel.edu (Jeff White)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware
- Subject: Re: 1.4 Meg drive for Mac II
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.032804.21249@cbis.ece.drexel.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 03:28:04 GMT
- References: <1057307.2B5C12EE@cmhgate.fidonet.org> <93023.213755U59985@uicvm.uic.edu> <1993Jan25.000653.1724@udel.edu>
- Organization: Drexel University, College of Engineering, Philadelphia, PA
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <1993Jan25.000653.1724@udel.edu> bower@pecan.cns.udel.edu (Ty Bower) writes:
- >
- >>You may also want to try the AE Plus Drive. It plugs into the external drive
- >>port of the Mac. It will read Mac 800K and 1.4meg and IBM 720K and 1.4meg.
- >>Everything needed is built into the drive. It only costs about $300 by mail
- >>order.
- >
- >[stuff deleted]
- >
- >>Now you are saying, but I have a Mac II, I don't have an external drive port.
- >>True, and Applied Engineering knows this too, that's why they will sell you a
- >>cable that plugs into the interal drive port on the Mac II's.
- >
- >
- >You say they offer a cable for Mac II's. Do they offer a fully internal
- >version of this drive? Can you remove the innards from an AE Plus
- >and install it internally yourself? And how do they get around the
- >ROM/SWIM limitation for Mac II's?
-
- I also looked into the AE drive for myself (a Mac Plus) and for a client
- (with a Mac II). You can't mount the drive internally because it has a front
- mounted eject switch. As far as the SWIM limitations, I'm not sure but I
- would guess they have some extra circuitry inside the drive that handles the
- conversion. I don't know if the Mac would be able to exactly identify the
- drive type (ie. would DiskCopy detect it as an actual HD disk, or just a DD
- one of capacity 1.4M?).
-
- >
- >It sounds neat, but I am distrustful. For $300 + $45 (for the cable),
- >it's $100 less than the real thing. But, if I cough up the $450 for
- >the Apple version, I also get free installation, it takes up no more
- >desk space, and I've now got the IIx ROMs (which removes some SIMM
- >configuration limitations.)
- >
-
- I've seem the AE drive advertised in the back of Mac magazines for as low
- as $275, and the cable for more like $19-$25, not $45, so, with some sharp
- shopping, you could pick up a solution for $300. I contemplated that for
- my client, but in the end decided the get the Apple FDHD/ROM upgrade because
- it would eliminate the 8M ram limit. As it turns out, I was able to get it
- off the GSA schedule for less than $350. Assuming I don't have problems
- installing it, I think it was by far the best choice.
-
- For my personal use (Mac Plus), I'm continuing to look into the 21M
- flopticals. I have seen one (w/ disk & FWT formatting software) for $299.
- For about the same price as the AE 1.4M drive, I would still get the ability
- to read/write Mac 1.4M disks (and DOS 720k/1.4M disks), as well as being able
- to write ~20M to a floptical. While the media costs make it a semi-expensive
- backup solution (in $/MB terms), there are not many competative backup
- options if you're not backing up tons of data.
-
- Jeff White
- jeff@cbis.ece.drexel.edu
-