Luckily the 800kB drives for the IIgs have an extra board that handles this daisy chain and drive eject circuitry.Īfter removing this extra board from a IIgs drive and connecting it to the Floppy Emu, everything worked beautifully. Macs don’t care about this signal, but Apples do. There’s an extra enable signal on the connector that either brings Drive 1 or Drive 2 into the circuit. This was due to the way Apples could daisy chain their disk drives. Apple ] to experiment with some ancient bromide-stained boxes, and the results are interesting to say the least.Īfter pulling out an old //e and IIgs from storage, found his Macintosh Floppy Emulator didn’t work with the Apples. It’s a great piece of hardware for bootstrapping that old Mac you might have sitting around. No, it’s not SCSI the early Apples had a DB-19 connector for connecting 400 and 800kB disk drives. A while ago, over at Big Mess ‘O Wires created a device that would emulate old Macintosh disk drives, storing all the data on an SD card.