A few people have mentioned adding support for images of ZX Spectrum Plus D disks.
The format of these disks is set out at: http://scratchpad.wikia.com/wiki/MGT_filesystem
Any chance support could be added to the main software to convert these disk images please.
PlusD Disk Image Support
Re: PlusD Disk Image Support
is it a floppy disk image ? the link point to a file system description?!?!rwap wrote:A few people have mentioned adding support for images of ZX Spectrum Plus D disks.
The format of these disks is set out at: http://scratchpad.wikia.com/wiki/MGT_filesystem
Any chance support could be added to the main software to convert these disk images please.
Re: PlusD Disk Image Support
The disk format is set out at the start:
10 sectors per track, with 512-byte sectors.
Either single-sided or double-sided disks may be used, and up to 80 tracks may be used per side.
Sectors are numbered 1..10, and tracks are tagged on disk as 0..79 on both sides.
However, within sector addresses stored in the filesystem, the most significant bit of the track number selects the side of the disk to use, meaning that tracks on the first side of the disk are numbered 0..79, and tracks on the second side are numbered 128..207.
10 sectors per track, with 512-byte sectors.
Either single-sided or double-sided disks may be used, and up to 80 tracks may be used per side.
Sectors are numbered 1..10, and tracks are tagged on disk as 0..79 on both sides.
However, within sector addresses stored in the filesystem, the most significant bit of the track number selects the side of the disk to use, meaning that tracks on the first side of the disk are numbered 0..79, and tracks on the second side are numbered 128..207.
Re: PlusD Disk Image Support
It's a raw file ? If yes you should be able to use the raw file loader ?rwap wrote:The disk format is set out at the start:
10 sectors per track, with 512-byte sectors.
Either single-sided or double-sided disks may be used, and up to 80 tracks may be used per side.
Sectors are numbered 1..10, and tracks are tagged on disk as 0..79 on both sides.
However, within sector addresses stored in the filesystem, the most significant bit of the track number selects the side of the disk to use, meaning that tracks on the first side of the disk are numbered 0..79, and tracks on the second side are numbered 128..207.