Hi,
I'm working on reviving an old SE/30. I've got it to the stage where I've had the motherboard recapped and am running on a SSD drive, however I have one big problem.
On occasion, and then persistently, I get an error that states "The disk is unreadable: Do you want to initialize it?" with Eject and Initialize buttons underneath. The icon shows what appears to be a Mac with an external floppy drive, with an error over the external drive. If you click Initialize, you get an error that the drive is write protected. If you click Eject the message goes away, the system works find for about 6 seconds and then it comes back up.
This error appears under both System 6 and System 7 (up to 7.5 - though you can do less in between on 7.5).
I can stop the error by running TechTools and clicking Clean on the Floppy Drive section.
I still get the error if I disconnect the SATA and boot from a floppy.
Any ideas?
The annoying thing is that sometimes the error just goes away for a period of time, but then it comes back again.
I'm working on reviving an old SE/30. I've got it to the stage where I've had the motherboard recapped and am running on a SSD drive, however I have one big problem.
On occasion, and then persistently, I get an error that states "The disk is unreadable: Do you want to initialize it?" with Eject and Initialize buttons underneath. The icon shows what appears to be a Mac with an external floppy drive, with an error over the external drive. If you click Initialize, you get an error that the drive is write protected. If you click Eject the message goes away, the system works find for about 6 seconds and then it comes back up.
This error appears under both System 6 and System 7 (up to 7.5 - though you can do less in between on 7.5).
I can stop the error by running TechTools and clicking Clean on the Floppy Drive section.
I still get the error if I disconnect the SATA and boot from a floppy.
Any ideas?
The annoying thing is that sometimes the error just goes away for a period of time, but then it comes back again.




