Difference between revisions of "UltraBay II Floppy Drive"

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(IBM Partnumbers)
(Also known (in IBM literature) as....)
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If at boot there is a floppy drive attached to the external port, this is fd0 and the ultrabay is fd1.  Otherwise (no floppies attached at boot/floppy in ultrabay at boot), then ultrabay is fd0 and external port is fd1.  An ACPI-aware floppy driver would have the ablility to stop the devices swapping around, but such a thing doesn't exist.
 
If at boot there is a floppy drive attached to the external port, this is fd0 and the ultrabay is fd1.  Otherwise (no floppies attached at boot/floppy in ultrabay at boot), then ultrabay is fd0 and external port is fd1.  An ACPI-aware floppy driver would have the ablility to stop the devices swapping around, but such a thing doesn't exist.
 
=== Also known (in IBM literature) as.... ===
 
  
 
=== Supported with ===
 
=== Supported with ===

Revision as of 12:49, 5 August 2011

UltraBay II Floppy drive

This is the 3.5" floppy drive for the UltraBay II slot.

The drive allows to be to be connected to a proprietary external FDD connector port, freeing the UltraBay for use of another device at the same time. This requires a special cable (similar interface to a 760ED external floppy? The floppy end connector is the same as the ThinkPad end connector on a 760ED).

Features

  • 3.5" 1.44 MB
  • additional connector for external attachment

Part numbers

  • Marketing PN: 12J0425
  • Cable PN: 12J0432

Linux Support

In case you have two floppy drives, or want to attach the floppy drive externally after boot, the floppy drivers hardware autodetection cannot be relied upon.
You can force the floppy driver to use both of them by adding the following line to /etc/modprobe.conf:

options floppy floppy=1,4,cmos

This gives you support for either external floppy or ultrabay floppy or both if you plug them in after boot time.

If at boot there is a floppy drive attached to the external port, this is fd0 and the ultrabay is fd1. Otherwise (no floppies attached at boot/floppy in ultrabay at boot), then ultrabay is fd0 and external port is fd1. An ACPI-aware floppy driver would have the ablility to stop the devices swapping around, but such a thing doesn't exist.

Supported with