Hi Mr B-o-B! You didn't say what kind of drives you are looking for; 3.5" high density, 3.5" standard density, 5.25" high density, 5.25" standard density 80 track or 40 track, double sided or single sided, or 8" high density, low density, hard sector, soft sector, or Vydeck. I will say that if this is for a disk duplication project where you will be using 3.5" or 5.25" HD drives, you have the best chance of success. If you are doing anything that requires making both 5.25" HD disks and 5.25" 360K low density disks, you should plan to have two sets of 5.25" drives because the track read-write width was different between 360K low density 40 track and 1.2MB high density 80 track. Chances are good you will not be using 8" drives, but if you do, there used to be software that would let you read 8" drives on your PC if you made your own control cable. It has been too many years to remember now but I know there was something about the old PC floppy disk controllers that made me buy a special controller card to get full capability for reading odd disk formats. Linux might even be the ideal OS for this kind of work since you can probably do anything you want with the right drivers. The final recommendation would be that you consider your options for proving the drives are good. I know that I've had good drives and bad drives over the years. Good drives usually had a bit better read-write head and electronics that gave a bit more margin on read. Bad drives had less margin and tended to give more read errors with marginal floppy disks, particularly when you get into high density media. And if you have 8 random drives from different vendors and manufacture dates, you probably have 8 drives with different physical alignment of the heads and no two the same. This tends to show up as difficulty reading a test disk, particularly on the inner tracks where data bits are packed the tightest on the media. I used to test my PC drives by formatting disks on each of them, then doing a surface scan of the disks as I swapped them between the other drives. Then I'd try to make sense of which drives had read errors on which floppies. The "keeper" drives were the ones that had no errors reading each other's disks since I could reasonably assume they had similar alignment and good read margin. 30 years ago in the TRS-80 days, I had 3.5", 5.25", and 8" floppy drive alignment disks where I worked and I frequently aligned the floppy drives when they were returned to the shop. I haven't seen anyone selling alignment disks for along time now, and since 3.5" and 5.25" drives are common as sand, I don't know that I'd bother with it today. Easier just to get a couple more drives and test them as above. And if you are duplicating floppies, be sure to pay attention to getting quality media. The cheaper disks are usually cheaper for a reason. Anyone who fought with 5.25" HD media knows that very well. The worst media I ever saw was at a three letter government agency and came from the lowest bidder. When you held it to the light and looked at the shiny surface, it looked like it had freckles. Each freckle was a high spot on the media that had been scraped off when the head went by and coated the read head like frost on your windshield on a cold winter morning. The build-up on the head reduced read margin until the drive couldn't read anything! If you can't collect enough old drives from the TClug list, you might want to put a Want on Craig's List or simply pick up some of the Free-haul-it-away computers on the list. Worst case I can give you the email address for a guy who scraps old computers as his business, but he might be the worst place to look since most of his scrap comes from companies that got rid of 5.25" drives 15-20 years ago. <www.twinslan.net> If none of the above pans out, your last option might be the local hamfest (electronic swap meet, flea market) on June 7 in St Paul near 3M Center. You'd have a pretty good chance of collecting a dozen drives out there, although 5" drives are getting pretty old even for hams...... I gave half a dozen old computers and drives to the scrapper last fall. I might have a few more drives if I look and knew what you wanted. :-) Doug Reed. On 4/20/14, tclug-list-request at mn-linux.org <tclug-list-request at mn-linux.org> wrote: > Date: Sun, 20 Apr 2014 00:58:53 -0500 > From: B-o-B De Mars <mr.chew.baka at gmail.com> > To: TCLUG <tclug-list at mn-linux.org> > Subject: [tclug-list] Need 8 floppy drives > > I am in need of as many old floppy drives that I can get my hands on. > The magic # I am looking for is 8, but would be interested in more. > I will give cash, or trade. > If anyone still has a pile of these drives collecting dust let me know. > Thanks! > > Mr. B-o-B