sechs said:
Are LS-120 drives a major inprovement over a floppy?
Only if you want to be able to put a 120 MB floppy into your top shirt pocket.
There's a guy on eBay with a stack of used drives (with SCSI adapters, no less) for what appears to be a reasonable price. Might take the plunge.
Ewww... sounds kinda yicky. I wouldn't buy a used LS-120 necessarily.
I would imagine there are some brand new old-stock LS-120 drives available somewhere for cheap. The Superdisk units that were marketed to the iMac crowd for years were external LS-120 drives in a translucent USB 1.1 case.
blakerwry said:
i've used 2 different LS120 drives and have not noticed them being any faster than a regular floppy with regular floppie disks. Infact, they have both been reletively loud and obnoxious compared to most of the floppy drives I've used.
Those sound like the first generation of LS-120. The first generation LS-120 was also rather fragile. There was a second generation of LS-120 that had a better sealed chassis to keep dust out. The second generation LS-120 was noticeably faster and a bit more rugged than the first generation LS-120.
There was an LS-
250 as well, but it never did make to the USA. For one thing, the LS-250 was nearly a year late coming to market after the LS-120 triumvirate of Panasonic, 3M, and Mitsubishi announced when it would be available.
I suspect that the market for the LS-120 and LS-250 follow-up went rather swiftly into the toilet during the early stages of the LS-250 release. I saw where places had them for sale -- briefly, I might add -- in Japan and Australia, but never in the USA. It might have even been that the places that had them for sale were simply listing them in advance of receiving them, but they never actually showed up in the wholesale channels to be sold.
The LS-250 was supposed to be faster than the LS-120, and of course, would hold 250 MB on a SuperDisk 250 floppy. I believe it also had the ability to format regular 1.44 MB floppy discs to safely hold something like 10 MB for reading and writing only on an LS-250 drive. There was also a similar Sony floppy drive, but I don't recall it being compatible with regular floppy discs.