I've got several old 400K and 800K floppy drives, in various conditions that I'd like to repair. One 400K drive basically works, but makes sandy grinding noises while the disk is spinning, and occasionally gets read errors. Another 400K drive makes ominous noises when powered up, but I haven't tried a disk in it yet. An 800K drive seems completely seized up, and I can't even insert a disk.
I'm planning to clean and lubricate the drives following the instructions at http://68kmla.org/wiki/index.php/Floppy_Drive_Lubrication . Does anybody know if those instructions apply to 400K drives, or only 800K or Superdrives? The only 400K floppy specific reference I found was viewtopic.php?f=7&t=18790#p177486
When the instructions say to clean the head with isopropyl alcohol, I assume that means swab it on with a Q-tip? It seems these are very delicate and easily broken?
Most of the maintenance/repair discussions I've found are a little too high level for a newbie like me, and say things like "remove the top head assembly and clean the heads" without really explaining how to do that. From that perspective, the lubrication guide on the Wiki is great, with lots of close up photos. Thanks to whoever put that together.
Any other great words of wisdom before I begin? Thanks!
I'm planning to clean and lubricate the drives following the instructions at http://68kmla.org/wiki/index.php/Floppy_Drive_Lubrication . Does anybody know if those instructions apply to 400K drives, or only 800K or Superdrives? The only 400K floppy specific reference I found was viewtopic.php?f=7&t=18790#p177486
When the instructions say to clean the head with isopropyl alcohol, I assume that means swab it on with a Q-tip? It seems these are very delicate and easily broken?
Most of the maintenance/repair discussions I've found are a little too high level for a newbie like me, and say things like "remove the top head assembly and clean the heads" without really explaining how to do that. From that perspective, the lubrication guide on the Wiki is great, with lots of close up photos. Thanks to whoever put that together.
Any other great words of wisdom before I begin? Thanks!

