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I have a lot of PC-98 disks with weird formats and copy protections that I'd like to archive as perfectly as possible in the hopes that someday support will improve enough that I can write them back as working disks. My question is, if I want to get as accurate backups as possible for archival, should I be reading up to track 84 for every disk, just in case there's necessary data there? I struggle to know when I should be reading past track 80 and when it's unnecessary for raw dumps! |
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Copy protected disks may read past the usual 80 cylinders so why not read all 84 if your drive can manage it. I will say that on Amiga it was rare. I know of one title that used 83 cylinders and that got fixed soon after because not all drives could do 83 cylinders! 81 or 82 cylinders was a bit more common (but not very common at all). |
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Copy protected disks may read past the usual 80 cylinders so why not read all 84 if your drive can manage it. I will say that on Amiga it was rare. I know of one title that used 83 cylinders and that got fixed soon after because not all drives could do 83 cylinders! 81 or 82 cylinders was a bit more common (but not very common at all).