You know I just found a box of good old five and a quarters (remember
the old whole punch read/write trick?) and if someone does have access
to a drive perhaps I could borrow it to try to transfer data?  Or
maybe at the next meeting we could work up a transfer station :)

--j

On 7/30/08, Smith, Craig A <Craig.A.Smith at honeywell.com> wrote:
> >I wasn't the original poster on this one, but...
> >I'm surprised to hear that these disks are expected to fail at this point.
> >I guess it has been 20 years since I looked at some of my old disks but I
> >was thinking I could copy some of the files off of them, copy them to my
> >HDD and toss the disks in the trash
>
>
> I believe storage is the key.  The magnetic domains should be good to the Curie point (768°C for iron) but hot, humid conditions affects the support medium, turning it into a gooey mess.  I recall a spot on NPR about a steam pipe breaking at the Smithsonian and the resulting loss of irreplaceable jazz recordings.  I have cassette tapes that are over 20 years old and still play.  Of course analog recordings may degrade more gracefully than digital.
>
> If the original poster can find a 5.25" floppy drive, I would be interested to know if the data transfer is successful.
>
>
>
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