5.25 Floppy Drives won't read any disks

theredx219

Honorable
Feb 8, 2013
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I recently got a vintage computer from somebody. It's an HP 9836C. It powers up fine but I cna't boot it up because none of the disks can be read. Obviously its some sort of issue with the floppy drives. Are they just dirty? How can I fix this? I hope I didn't put this in the wrong thread, I didn't see one that fit all that well. Any help is greatly appreciated.
 
Solution
yeah. you need the boot floppy.

any possibility of hooking up a cd-rom and running an ubuntu disc to boot. and then maybe the diskette will be seen or found......... and then maybe you will be able to pull stuff off..........................???................. but back in my olden days with limited use of 5.25's I think I still need the original operating system to access the disks............. I recently picked up WP but now I can't remember how I had my floppy hooked up in xp machine. ............. those dos days..................( insert groan of Lurch here.)


That is an early HP-UX machine from 1983. Running a HP proprietary Unix. It may well have no hard drive (a $3000 option), and runs completely off the 5.25" floppies.
 
yeah. you need the boot floppy.

any possibility of hooking up a cd-rom and running an ubuntu disc to boot. and then maybe the diskette will be seen or found......... and then maybe you will be able to pull stuff off..........................???................. but back in my olden days with limited use of 5.25's I think I still need the original operating system to access the disks............. I recently picked up WP but now I can't remember how I had my floppy hooked up in xp machine. ............. those dos days..................( insert groan of Lurch here.)
 
Solution

It's a 68000 based machine, from WELL before Linux even existed. Good luck with that.
 
my knowledge of that older stuff just isn't here. i knew nothing the first time i sat in front of a machine at college. it wasn't until i started gaming on pc's that i got into the hardware end. after the new millennium.

back in the 70's the machines were 5 feet tall, spun big wheels and printed everything on big sheets of paper from information hole punched into cards.
 

Neither did IDE.

You had your choice:
A) RLL/MFM/ESDI
B) SASI/SCSI
C) Proprietary