A lot of people got burnt trying to use an MFM drive with RLL. While
it _could_ work (and did for many), there was a risk of losing data,
because some MFM drives couldn't reliably handle the higher density of
RLL. From memory, the drive technology was basically the same, it was
a matter of the exact specs of the drive. Using a certified RLL drive meant no hassles.
The same technology, but more sectors per track.
Yes, and higher data density, which means tighter specs for RLL drives.
Sysop: | Weed Hopper |
---|---|
Location: | Clearwater, FL |
Users: | 14 |
Nodes: | 6 (0 / 6) |
Uptime: | 131:56:41 |
Calls: | 40 |
Files: | 50,069 |
D/L today: |
167 files (31,366K bytes) |
Messages: | 268,707 |