> If any of you folks are interested in historical stuff like this, you should > check out: > > http://www.bbsdocumentary.com > > he's doing a really good job of putting together a film documentary about > the early days of bbs's including in-depth stuff about the hardware and > software used. > > Of course my favorite page... > > http://www.bbsdocumentary.com/photos/129ripco/ > > thanks again to everyone for the input, > > -bruce > bje@ripco.com After your post yesterday I spent like half the day on that site . After your post today I think you have an excellent chance of getting the drive working. I don't think a 14 year sleep will inhibit it. I noted you had the drive in slot 5. Any higher slot, the disk II in slot six would boot first. I would guess you booted the faster dos3.3 and issued the PR#5. You could probably pull the slot 6 controller and direct boot off the hard drive. You might also boot a prodos floppy containing the Prosel Block Buster program and take a look at the hard drive blocks. Some feed back would help on the controller. With the controller in slot 5, $C501=$20 $C503=$00 $C505=$03 is a disk device rom byte signature. If C5FF =00 a disk II 16 sector assumed. If C5FF=FF a disk II 13 sector assumed. Else this byte is the low byte entry point for an intelligent disk device. C5FE is a status byte bit 7 medium removable bit 6 device interruptible bit 5-4 number of volumes bit 3 device supports formatting bit 2 device can be written to bit 1 device can be read from bit 0 device status can be read (must be on) C5FC-C5FE total number of blocks. If $0000, information is obtained by making a STATUS call. If the controller conforms to what prodos expects then prodos is providing the driver. If not things get a whole lot more difficult.