EPISODE · Dec 29, 2021 · 1 MIN
Reading floppy disk data, part 3! itsa pulse party
from Adafruit Industries · host Adafruit Industries
OK so part 1 we got our wiring worked out and found an index pulse. Part 2 is we started getting MFM data coming out. Now we're capturing pulses with gpio bitbanging, and storing all the pulse widths in a large memory array. each track has a 500Khz signal, and outputs data every 5 Hz, so we have a max of 100K samples worst case. since we're using a cortex arm with 192K~256K of RAM (the RP2040 has 264K!), its no biggie to store all the pulses in an array. here we are reading track 1 and binning the pulses: we're seeing three pulse width bins stand out, about 40 count, 62 count and 85 count. but there's also a couple ultra short pulses (25 count) and an ultra long pulse (~200 count). each count is about 48ns-ish so that translates to 2us, 3us and 4us bins, with a few 1us and one or two 10us+. not exactly sure whats up with those outliers. do we ignore them? are they start-of-data markers? We also noticed that track 0 has way more unusually long or unbinned pulses, like almost 100 different values. its a little mysterious, we'll have to investigate if there's something special about track 0! Part 2: https://youtu.be/frnJ7pWr5Zg Part 1: https://youtu.be/ceyM6vYpT74 #floppy #retro #gpio #bitbang #pulse #rp2040 Visit the Adafruit shop online - http://www.adafruit.com ----------------------------------------- LIVE CHAT IS HERE! http://adafru.it/discord Adafruit on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/adafruit Subscribe to Adafruit on YouTube: http://adafru.it/subscribe New tutorials on the Adafruit Learning System: http://learn.adafruit.com/ -----------------------------------------
What this episode covers
OK so part 1 we got our wiring worked out and found an index pulse. Part 2 is we started getting MFM data coming out. Now we're capturing pulses with gpio bitbanging, and storing all the pulse widths in a large memory array. each track has a 500Khz signal, and outputs data every 5 Hz, so we have a max of 100K samples worst case. since we're using a cortex arm with 192K~256K of RAM (the RP2040 has 264K!), its no biggie to store all the pulses in an array. here we are reading track 1 and binning the pulses: we're seeing three pulse width bins stand out, about 40 count, 62 count and 85 count. but there's also a couple ultra short pulses (25 count) and an ultra long pulse (~200 count). each count is about 48ns-ish so that translates to 2us, 3us and 4us bins, with a few 1us and one or two 10us+. not exactly sure whats up with those outliers. do we ignore them? are they start-of-data markers? We also noticed that track 0 has way more unusually long or unbinned pulses, like almost 100 different values. its a little mysterious, we'll have to investigate if there's something special about track 0! Part 2: https://youtu.be/frnJ7pWr5Zg Part 1: https://youtu.be/ceyM6vYpT74 #floppy #retro #gpio #bitbang #pulse #rp2040 Visit the Adafruit shop online - http://www.adafruit.com ----------------------------------------- LIVE CHAT IS HERE! http://adafru.it/discord Adafruit on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/adafruit Subscribe to Adafruit on YouTube: http://adafru.it/subscribe New tutorials on the Adafruit Learning System: http://learn.adafruit.com/ -----------------------------------------
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Reading floppy disk data, part 3! itsa pulse party
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