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Diskette format


This is a list of different floppy disk formats.

This is a list of 8-inch floppy diskette formats as introduced by IBM.

Digital Equipment Corporation used the following formats on 8-inch disks:

Note: "RX02 8-inch Floppy Drive Information". David Gesswein. Retrieved 2007-09-21.

The RX02 mode is not compatible with other standard drives since the headers are always in single density mode but the data is written in double density mode. Also in double density mode the standard MFM encoding was modified from the standard to prevent false header detection in data.

LS = Laser Servo; HiFD = High capacity Floppy Disk; SS = Single Sided; DS = Double Sided

The formatted capacities of floppy disks is less than the unformatted capacity, which does not include the sector and track headings required for use of the disk. The amount of capacity lost to this overhead depends on the application of the drive and is beyond the manufacturer's control. Mixtures of decimal SI-style prefixes and binary record lengths required care to properly calculate total capacity. Unlike semiconductor memory, which doubled in size each time an address pin was added to an integrated circuit package and so naturally favored counts that were powers of two, the capacity of a disk drive was the product of the sector size, number of sectors per track, number of tracks per side, (and in hard drives, the number of disk platters in the drive). Individual formatted sector lengths are arbitrarily set as powers of 2 (256 bytes, 512 bytes, etc.), and disk capacity is naturally calculated as multiples of the sector size. This led to an impure combination of decimal multiples of sectors and binary sector sizes. The "1.44 MB" value for the 3½-inch HD floppies is the most widely known example; where the "M" prefix is peculiar to the context of the disk drive and represents neither a decimal million nor a mebibyte 2 ^20. See Ultimate capacity and speed.

Formatted Storage Capacity is total size of all sectors on the disk. Marketed Capacity is the capacity, typically unformatted, by the original media OEM vendor or in the case of IBM media, the first OEM thereafter. Other formats may get more or less capacity from the same drives and disks.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, many different logical disk formats were used, depending on the hardware platform.


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