The Battle of Kursk, involving some 6,000 tanks, two million men, and 5,000 aircraft, ends with the German offensive repulsed by the Soviets at heavy cost. Today in History: 1943 The largest battle of tanks ends Spark! Pro series - 13th July 2023 Spiceworks Originals."Negativity & doubt produce no positives"? Really? Research how each stores data on their media and tell us why you think your idea would work. I will grant you that the results will certainly be degraded, but (strangely) because it's stored as analog IF it was stored in a decently controlled environment (which in the case includes little magnetic interference as well as temperature/humidity) there's a actually non-zero chance they will be able to get images. They are the wrong size, interlace, tracks, and analog. The ONLY thing they have in common are the rough shape of the diskette and the fact they use magnetic media. The formats differences are far beyond normal incompatibility. I've been doing all kinds of things with weird tech since I was 17. You might get lucky if the disk was stored in good conditions.Ĭheers!I'm 50. Phil, spending thousands of dollars for data that is probably irrecoverable would be asinine - find a device, take it apart - clean the heads make sure the mechanisms work. It "will work" but in this case highly impractical. Definitely wouldn't try it with the "important case" 2" :)There is no way on earth that this will work. So you've tried this? What were the results? I'm interested at what the analog data looked like, Paste it here if you have it handy.Have you ever had to fix a irreplaceable disk that had its case damaged, I'm 34, so I grew up with floppies in my backpack getting smashed - I have literally peeled them out of a disk to put them into a new disk and moved the data. but if its RAW data you seek it should be able to read it with some special IO tools. Probably a waste of time though as the VF is probably a different density and format all together. If you had another 2" disk you could remove the media pop it in a 3.5" disk, put it back together and see if you can get a read write on it, or at least check the format to see if its readable on a 3.5 disk head.
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