A.3. track formatting – Rana Systems Elite Series User Manual

Page 280

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ELITE SERIES USER MANUAL

APPEN. A - DISK I/O

A . 3 . T r a c k F o r m a t t i n g

Data is recorded on the diskette uses a “group

coded recording” technique (GCR) which requires

that a bit with a value of 1 he recorded onto

the diskette within a given maximum period of

time. This method has some very significant

differences from other possible recording tech-

niques, but all of these differences only occur

at the hardware level of the computer. Once the

data is presented to the software (by the hard-

ware), no real difference can he detected.

This appendix will not attempt to explain the

OCR recording technique in the brief explanation

of data recording which preceeds the software

discussion. Instead, the “frequency modulated”

recording technique (FM) will he substituted.

This is due to a rather extensive difference in

the complexity of explaining the two techniques.

This will not hinder the remainder of the ex-

planation since, as was already mentioned, dif-

ferences from the software standpoint are com-

pletely hidden by certain rules which must be

obeyed when accessing Apple-type disk drives.

In the frequency modulated recording technique,

data written on and read back from the diskette

takes the form shown in the figure to follow,

which represents the binary data pattern 101.

The clock bits and data bits are interleaved, as

shown in the next figure. A data bit between

two clock bits represents a binary 1. An ab-

sence of that bit represents a binary 0. The

period between the edge of one clock bit and the

P a g e A - 9

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