Difference between revisions of "Connector:2nd disc drive (CPC664, CPC6128, CPC6128+)"

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(CPC664/CPC6128)
(CPC664/CPC6128)
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== CPC664/CPC6128 ==
 
== CPC664/CPC6128 ==
  
The following table lists the signal on the "2nd Disk Drive" connector on the back of the CPC664/CPC6128
+
The following table lists the signal on the "2nd Disk Drive" connector on the back of the CPC664/CPC6128.<br>
 
Signal names in simple brackets show the meaning the signal has today.
 
Signal names in simple brackets show the meaning the signal has today.
 
For your convenience, the pin no. are given as specified in the Shugart standard first, followed by the pin no. as assigned by Amstrad and shown in the manual.
 
For your convenience, the pin no. are given as specified in the Shugart standard first, followed by the pin no. as assigned by Amstrad and shown in the manual.
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|n/a||"35"||N/C||Schneider CPC6128 only
 
|n/a||"35"||N/C||Schneider CPC6128 only
 
|-
 
|-
|1 (red wire)||34||GND||Ground
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|1 (red wire¹)||34||GND||Ground
 
|-
 
|-
 
|2||33||N/C (/REDWC)||Density Select 1=Low/0=High
 
|2||33||N/C (/REDWC)||Density Select 1=Low/0=High
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|32||3||/SIDE1||0=Side 1 Select
 
|32||3||/SIDE1||0=Side 1 Select
 
|-
 
|-
|34||1 (blue wire)||/RDY (/DSKCHG)||0=Ready (1=Disk Change/0=Ready¹)
+
|34||1 (blue wire²)||/RDY (/DSKCHG)||0=Ready (1=Disk Change/0=Ready³)
 
|-
 
|-
 
|All others (odd)||All others (even)||GND||Ground
 
|All others (odd)||All others (even)||GND||Ground
 
|}
 
|}
  
¹: Although it might look like it, /RDY and /DSKCHG are not compatible. The CPC expects the drive to become ready (=0) by itself, while the DSKCHG signal stays high until confirmation through the PC, so the drive will never become RDY.
+
 
 +
¹: Assuming you are using a cable which is made to match the Shugart standard on the floppy side.
 +
²: Original cables from Amstrad/Schneider had blue wires to mark pin 1 (which is pin 34 in Shugart standard).
 +
³: Although it might look like it, /RDY and /DSKCHG are not compatible. The CPC expects the drive to become ready (=0) by itself, while the DSKCHG signal stays high until confirmation through the PC, so the drive will never become RDY.
 +
 
 +
Except for the hint in note 3, a PC floppy can be directly operated on this connector, as long as you keep attention to the fact that the red wire of a PC floppy cable which is unchanged on the floppy side belongs on pin 34 of the CPC connector.
 +
Some drives can be jumpered to output the desired /RDY signal, some need soldering. Others can be operated by "tuning" the cable.
 +
See [3 1/2" & 5 1/4" Disk Drives] for more detailed instructions.

Revision as of 08:50, 20 April 2007

CPC664/CPC6128

The following table lists the signal on the "2nd Disk Drive" connector on the back of the CPC664/CPC6128.
Signal names in simple brackets show the meaning the signal has today. For your convenience, the pin no. are given as specified in the Shugart standard first, followed by the pin no. as assigned by Amstrad and shown in the manual.

Note that pins 35 and 36 (Amstrad enumeration) exist on Schneider CPC6128 only due to the use of a 36pin Centronics connector.

Pin No. (Shugart) Pin No. (CPC manual) Signal Name Description
n/a "35" N/C Schneider CPC6128 only
1 (red wire¹) 34 GND Ground
2 33 N/C (/REDWC) Density Select 1=Low/0=High
4 31 N/C Reserved
6 29 N/C Reserved
8 27 /Index 0=Index
10 25 N/C (/MOTEA) -/- (0=Motor Enable Drive 0)
12 23 /DRVSB Drive Select 1
14 21 N/C (/DRVSA) -/-(Drive Select 0)
16 19 /MOTEB 0=Motor Enable Drive 1
18 17 /DIR 0=Direction Select
20 15 /Step 0=Head Step
22 13 /WDATE Write Data
24 11 /WGATE Floppy Write Enable, 0=Write Gate
26 9 /TRK00 0=Track 00
28 7 /WPT 0=Write Protect
30 5 /RDATA Read Data
32 3 /SIDE1 0=Side 1 Select
34 1 (blue wire²) /RDY (/DSKCHG) 0=Ready (1=Disk Change/0=Ready³)
All others (odd) All others (even) GND Ground


¹: Assuming you are using a cable which is made to match the Shugart standard on the floppy side. ²: Original cables from Amstrad/Schneider had blue wires to mark pin 1 (which is pin 34 in Shugart standard). ³: Although it might look like it, /RDY and /DSKCHG are not compatible. The CPC expects the drive to become ready (=0) by itself, while the DSKCHG signal stays high until confirmation through the PC, so the drive will never become RDY.

Except for the hint in note 3, a PC floppy can be directly operated on this connector, as long as you keep attention to the fact that the red wire of a PC floppy cable which is unchanged on the floppy side belongs on pin 34 of the CPC connector. Some drives can be jumpered to output the desired /RDY signal, some need soldering. Others can be operated by "tuning" the cable. See [3 1/2" & 5 1/4" Disk Drives] for more detailed instructions.