Those Disk 3½" & 5¼" Floppy Disc Drives are not the original Amstrad standardyet the media and drives were far cheaper so they were common especially when used as a 2nd drive.
Yet they During the lifetime of the CPC both drives were far advertised in UK magazines with the 3½" becoming much more cheap common in it's later years due to it's use in the PC. In Germany 5¼" were advertised and are nowadays easier well supported by Vortex for much longer. Magazines also promoted the use of these drives especially with the use of another DOS or C/PM to be able to usetheir full capacity.
Both 3½" & 5¼" drives were often double sided and supported double density and high density although the Amstrad could only support Double Density.
Especially Nowadays the 3½5¼" (3"1/2 ?) as those disk drives are still availlable in some retailers. You can hard to find and are expensive, media is not made anymore and new-old-stock media is also easily hard to find such . The 3½" drives in any garbage if you properly scavenge can be found from old rusty PC computersand there is still a read supply of new-old-stock media.
Increasingly however it is often easier to use a disc drive emulator or one of the devices that can run games from SD cards.
==Comparison of media costs==
Many Modern CPC users replace their old 3" by an external disc (each) - £3.993.5"1/2, adding a Disk drive Adisc (each) -B / B-A switcher50p5.25" disc (each) - 50p
Also a side switcher allows to use a 3"1/2 disk like a 3" disk...switching manually the sides (yet a decent sofware can do it).==Usage of Media==
A big advantage at To make full use of the time was capacity of the media you need to get access to CPuse another DOS or C/M sofware library, as most of those were PM on such Diskyour CPC which can support more tracks and two sides. Then you can use around 720KB per disc.
Also, Without another DOS you can still use some of the Disk were fare cheaper than the exotic 3", but...few CPC users actually got such drives.capacity:
== Softwares released on * 3½" discs can't be turned like 3"1/discs therefore with [[AMSDOS|AMSDOS]] you can use a manual side switch to choose the sides giving 2 disk==x 178KB per side. Without the side switch it's just 178KB. Using discs like this back in the day was still useful as the media was cheaper.
*[[Orion Prime]]This pure awsomness even use 5¼" discs can be turned over like a full DD disk 80 tracks with more than 700Ko of Data, yet 3" and you have to get can write both sides if you cut a write protect hole on the other side of each disc OR like the 3½" a DD disk Drive, as some older models may lack this feature (really really older)manual side switch can be used.
[[Categoryimage:Hardware3.5.jpg|200px|thumb|Internal 3.5" drive]][[Categoryimage:Peripherals5,25_cable.jpg|200px|thumb|advertisement for 5,25" drive cable for CPC in 1990]] ==Scavenged 3½"== It is worth noting that 3½" scavenged from PCs will lack the drive selection and ready signal. Often these drives will need a modification to make them useable OR you can make sure the drive motor is always on. ==Common PC Formats == 3½": *DD = 720KB *HD : 1,44 MB 5¼": *DD = 360KB*HD = 1.2MB == Beware : HD == Nowaday the most common 3½" disk is HD. These can be found as used or new old stock on auction sites. But our beloved CPC can't understand easily the concept of High Density Disk with 1,44MB available... so you have to cheat to use the media: just put some opaque duct-tape (scotch-tape, whatever...) on the HD Hole. Tada the drive will think DD media is used and now it's usable. PC users used to do the opposite : cut/drill a HD hole on DD disk...this worked well sometimes. You can also modify your HD drive to behave as a DD one (but this would be permanent of course).. Check for appropriate jumpers on your drive! == A clever choice == A great advantage at the time (in the 80's) was to get access to CP/M sofware library, as most of those were on such Floppy Disks. Also, those Floppy Disks were far cheaper than the exotic 3", but... few CPC users actually own such drives. Mostly professionnal users...The common snotling Gamer couldn't even dream of this (nor even knew it possible)... until nowadays. As the magnetic disk is bigger...well the format is bigger too.It is common to get 720KB disk (using the 2 sides, so 80 tracks) == Software's issues == Many Modern CPC users replace their old 3" with an external 3"1/2, often adding a Disk drive A-B / B-A switcher (allowing the use of an external disk Drive as if it were the internal one = Drive A) and/or a side switcher to allow the use of a 3"1/2 disk like a 3" disk... switching manually the sides as needed by good old 3" disk drives (yet a decent software can do it). The side switcher and A-B drive's switchers are needed only if you use old software (using [[AMSDOS|AMSDOS]]), as most of them couldn't really figure they were loaded from B drives, or had no such feature as double sided drives. They were designed for good old 3" drive so the 720KB DD external 3"1/2 is not implemented. But modern software designers can allow this fairly easily. Orion Prime uses the Double side feature, enabling a simple 720KB disk with no manual side switches. Rick Dangerous 128+ (1.1 add-on) seems to allow the game to be loaded from the B drive. It is up to the CPC-scene to design their software to include those options, allowing more un-modded drives to be simply used as external B drives with no need to add extra buttons and cable assemblies on the Amstrad. As modifying all the software library of the good old times seems impractical, yet modern era software have to use this. == Software released on 3.5" disk== * [[Orion Prime]] - This pure awsomeness even uses a full DD disk's 80 tracks with more than 700KB of Data, but you have to have a proper DD disk drive, as some older models may lack this feature... == Software released on 5.25" disk== * [[Data Media]] released several software titles for use with their [[Data Media Disc System]]
== Non 3" CPC disk drives ==
* [[F1|Vortex Disc Drives]] ([[Vortex Computersysteme|Vortex]])
*any scavenged rusty junk may be good enough nowaday, if you have a 664 or 6128...
== Connections and Wiring ==
[[DIY:Floppy_Drives]]
== Guides ==
[[Guide on how to connect a 3.5]]<br>
[[Guide on how to connect a 3.5" drive to a CPC6128/664]] with photos
[[Amstrad Computer User]] magazine published a two-page guide on how to connect a 5.25" drive to a CPC 464:<gallery>image:ACU8505-082.jpgimage:ACU8505-085.jpg</gallery>[[Category:Hardware]][[Category:Peripherals]][[Category:DATA Storage]]