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how to read data from very old macintosh disks
Published by: smith 2009-01-08
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  • how do I READ and transfer data from 15-year-old macintosh floppy disks to modern media? I have a bunch of 3.5" disks created on Macintosh II and maybe other computers that came immediately after Mac II. A lot, but not all, say 'MF-2DD' or 'MFD-2DD' if that gives you some idea of the vintage. I am on a PC and I tried several "Mac to PC" disk readers, and none of them worked. This included TransMac, MacDisk, and HFVExplorer. Though I am on a PC, I am willing to work on a Mac if that's what it takes to get the data.


  • Depending on what is on the discs, you may be wasting your time trying to transfer them to a PC. The older macs have applications that can be transferred from mac to mac without installing, but if you have an old document written in an old application, you will most likely not be able to just bring it over and access it. If you have jpegs or tiffs, these should transfer easily with transmac, but keep in mind that PC needs to know the extension to be able to open it. (such as .jpg) If you have the ability to email attachments from your old mac, that is another way. I know I used to use an older version of AOL for mac (like version 3) that worked with an old MAC SE. I also got a CD burner with with TOASTER software, Also, IOMEGA ZIP discs will allow you to load all your data onto like a 100mb zip disc. (You can find old zips on ebay). Then those zip discs can be opened on a PC with a mac soft application.
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  • By do not work do you mean the PC just doesn't see them or do you mean the files are not openable? I suspect the former and that is because the disks are likely in Mac format which is different than PC format. Later Macs could format and read PC 1.4 Meg floppies but not the 700K ones that were common to the earliest Mac II's. The best solution might be to find an older Mac and copy all your files to it's hard drive, then write them to a CD using an externally connected CD burner or e-mail them to yourself on the PC.


  • Easy peasy if you've got some money to spend! Buy a 'catweasel'. The 'catweasel' is a universale Floppy disk controller. It plugs into a PCI port and connects to a standard PC floppy disk drive. It will read virtually all known formats of floppy disk. Including DD/HD disks from Acorns, Amigas and Classic Macintosh computers. A quick 'goog;e' will tell you where you can buy one for around $40.
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  • Some of the programs you mentioned would work to read the disks on a pc, if you were using high density Mac disks(Basilisk II will actually give you a Mac desktop on your PC, where you can run old Mac programs and load the old documents) but the disks you mentioned are only double density. You need an older Mac to transfer the files to either high density floppies, or some other form of media. I am a collector of old Macs, and if you really need those files, I could move them off the disks and email then all over as a zip file.


  • Hello Foofaraw, Reading the old Mac floppies requires a "SuperDrive" on a Macintosh desktop or laptop system. This is because it is likely the floppies were not formatted in a PC compatible form (was possible on a Mac, but not always done). The newer Mac systems however, do not have a floppy drive (CD or CD/DVD ROM only) but some could use an USB drive such as http://www.macobserver.com/newreviews/bt/99/superdiskusb/superdiskusb.html What kind of Mac system do you have access to? --Maniac
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  • Hello, well I'm not sure if the type of files you have on the MAC disks are document files, but here is a website that can provide conversion to PC (Microsoft Word, etc..) format if this is what you need. Let me know if I've been of any help. http://www.luxsoft.demon.co.uk/lux/bconv.html


  • I agree with alan7002-ga, you may have problems even reading the disk in any recent mac and PCs are out of the question. However, i'd bet a Mac that can read the disks, can't write to a CD. I would look for an old Powerbook or all in one mac with some kind of networking, they all hook up to _each other_ but you will want one with a modem or an ethernet port OR and old mac and one running up to OS 9 and an Mac Printer/modem cord to connect the two together. If you get the powerbook, you connect it to a newer mac with scsi ports and a scsi cable.





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