Thanks for the pointer back to the earlier thread! I remember that discussion, but now I will go back and read it much more closely.
Is the floppy EMU incompatible with the very earliest 128K machines, then? Or do I have to do something special to make a floppy EMU work with it? I assumed that the sad mac problem was caused by bad components on the motherboard, but maybe it's the Version A problem. I haven't tried opening the 400K external I have to see which mechanism is on the inside. Both the floppy emu and the external drive triggered the same symptoms, a badly distorted startup chime followed by a sad mac and/or scrambled video.
ETA: reading further on the threads you linked, no one mentions a sad mac as a symptom of ROM/drive incompatibility. I'm back to thinking components on the logic board. Eventually I'll post a larger pic of the motherboard and see if the folks here can help me decide what to fix.
Is the floppy EMU incompatible with the very earliest 128K machines, then? Or do I have to do something special to make a floppy EMU work with it? I assumed that the sad mac problem was caused by bad components on the motherboard, but maybe it's the Version A problem. I haven't tried opening the 400K external I have to see which mechanism is on the inside. Both the floppy emu and the external drive triggered the same symptoms, a badly distorted startup chime followed by a sad mac and/or scrambled video.
ETA: reading further on the threads you linked, no one mentions a sad mac as a symptom of ROM/drive incompatibility. I'm back to thinking components on the logic board. Eventually I'll post a larger pic of the motherboard and see if the folks here can help me decide what to fix.
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