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Beige G3 floppy issues

macluxo

New member
I've been tinkering with my beige G3 running 9.2.2 as of late and discovered it is having some issues with its floppy drive.

Specifically, whenever I eject a floppy, it spits it out, then shows the floppy initialization screen. It doesn't matter if I click on eject or initialize. It goes through the motions of what it would normally do, but remember, there's no floppy in the drive!

The floppy itself works fine (I am able to copy and run programs without issue) it just goes haywire when I eject.

Has anyone experienced a similar problem? I'm thinking it may be software related...

Thanks in advance...

 

Dennis Nedry

Well-known member
I would first just remove the drive and clean all the dust out of it. Then insert a disk into the bare drive and manually eject it a few times to try to observe any problems. Could be something to do with the microswitch that tells it if there's a disk in there or not. Clean that part especially well.

 

Dennis Nedry

Well-known member
I would never have thought of that. Is there some specific reason behind that suggestion, Bunsen?

Are you suggesting to rebuild the desktop on the HD or the floppy, or both?

 

macluxo

New member
I had been planning on putting a fresh copy of an OS on there, and I ended up putting 8.5 on my G3. Ejecting floppies doesn't appear to be a problem any more.

I really wonder if it is OS 9.2.2 that caused the issue...

 

madmax_2069

Well-known member
i have ran into these issues before, sometimes the driver extension can get messed up, sometimes it can be the eject system getting gummed up, or a bad cable connection.

i think it was more of a issue with the drive or the driver pref file or something other in the OS and not the OS itself.

the only floppy drive i had issues with was the one in my P475 not ejecting due to being gummed up inside due to not being used, working it a little bit and cleaning it out solved that issue.

 

Dennis Nedry

Well-known member
There is no extension for the floppy drive. Its driver is built-into the ROM of the Mac, and may also be inside the system file somewhere. The CD-ROM has an extension. Neither likely have prefs files either though.

It's possible that the system file was screwed up in such a way that it acted goofy with floppies. It could also have been the Finder, but we'll never know for sure. There could still also be a hardware issue that shows up only in Mac OS 9, so there are a lot of different places this problem could have been.

 

Bunsen

Admin-Witchfinder-General
Is there some specific reason behind that suggestion, Bunsen? / to rebuild the desktop
It rang a vague bell with something I've encountered before.

 

Dennis Nedry

Well-known member
Hah, I remember that about the .Sony driver now. Cool.

Certainly doesn't ever hurt to rebuild the desktop Bunsen, might as well try it and automatically fix a few other problems in the process.

 

Dog Cow

Well-known member
This is more trivia now, but it used to be in the old days of System, and I think this is System 6 and before, you could really mess up a Mac by creating a file named .Sony.

 

Dennis Nedry

Well-known member
YEAH! I think I read that in Mac Secrets or something. I have 2 of the 5th edition of that book. It is a GREAT book. It even lists each Mac model. You can get the PDF of that book pretty easily I think. I remember that it came with the PDF of 4th edition on the CD. Very cool stuff.

We should pick out little secrets from that book and surprise each other periodically.

 

Dog Cow

Well-known member
I have an old edition, (2nd, I think) It's from 1994 and covers the very first Power Macs, so that's where I read it.

 
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