Subject: Re: Reading a PRODOS ZIP disk with a Mac Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail From: supertimer@aol.com (Supertimer) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Lines: 23 NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder05.news.aol.com X-Admin: news@aol.com Date: 28 Apr 1999 06:06:45 GMT Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com References: Message-ID: <19990428020645.03217.00000350@ng08.aol.com> labelas@hotmail.com (Labelas Enoreth) wrote: >Perhaps the problem is that the Mac zip driver is trying to load it, >rather than a standard scsi driver? I had boundless problems with prodos >formatted zips, forcing me to disable the iomega driver and manually load >it with silverlining everytime I wanted to mount it in the finder (and >silverlining would bitch about partition data needing to be updated) > >A side question though...actually, two. >One, when you format something to the maximum PD volume size (32mb, >right?) on an older (say, IIe or something with older ProDOS) machine, >does it have the sense to just mark out the 'extra', or does it format it >in a way that when you try to, say, mount it on a mac, it gets all >confused because of the 'extra' space afterwards? I saw something like >this happen with an old, old PC HD and driver, but I wondered... If you were using a IIGS with a Zip disk, you'll want to format the Zip disk as one large HFS volume, thus no empty space. If you are using it with a IIe, then you'll want to partition the Zip disk into three 32MB partitions. Again, no empty space. Then again, the empty space should not matter.