The Gotek was placed into an old Golem external floppy case, i set the jumper from S0 to S1 to have it running as DF1. Generally the Gotek starts with -, responds to a plugged in USB key with F-F and 000 later.
Gotek Drive is a perfect replacement for Amiga 600 & Amiga 1200 original floppy drives. Plug & play solution with a 3D printed bracket, blue OLED display and a Flash Floppy 3.21 firmware already installed. USB stick (NOT INCLUDED) is needed to put the FF software.
This floppy emulator is flashed with the last FlashFloppy firmware for Amiga/Atari/Amstrad/Acorn/IBM-PC, or the universal HxC firmware for Amiga, Amstrad CPC 6128, Atari ST, Sinclair Spectrum +3, and any computer, keyboard, sampler, or CNC machine with a Shugart/PC floppy interface (.).
Amiga Gotek F F 150
Hey Guys! This is it. I just received the first batch of USB Joystick adapters, PCB version 3.0. This new version is supporting virtually any DB9 joystick ever made! Just use the flash utility to reprogram as desired. Here is the compatibility list: •Atari 2006 Joystick •Atari 7800 Joystick (2 buttons) •Atari analog Paddle (2 controllers) •Atari video touch pad Keyboard •Amstrad Joystick •Amiga Joystick (up to 3 buttons) •Amiga Mouse (up to 3 buttons) •Commodore 64 Joystick •Commodore CD32 Joypad (7 buttons) •Coleco Vision Controller •Intellivision Touch pad (16 buttons) •MSX Joystick •Sega Genesis Joypad (3 and 6 buttons) •Sega Master System Joypad (2 buttons) This new hardware version was designed with compatibility in mind. Every pin is reconfigurable so new firmware can be built to support much more devices. Design will stay open source so anybody out there can contribute to this quest for retro gaming pleasure! You can order them directly on the web site at www.retronicdesign.com or by sending me a PM request here. Cheers! :beerbanger:
F&f.hu
After getting annoyed at the failure rate of my old 3.5' floppy disks I started using a Gotek USB Floppy emulator on my Amiga and Atari ST. Being impressed with how well that worked I decided to give it a shot on my trusty ZX Spectrum +3 who's disks are as equally unreliable, even harder to source and also very expensive. Rune factory oceans wii isos. On my other Gotek drives I use the FlashFloppy firmware (still in active development at time of writing v0.9.27a - Aug'18) and recent developments have included .DSK support for the Amstrad CPC & Spectrum +3 (basically the same format). Therefore as a test I mocked up some connectors (as described here), plugged it all in and got it running nicely with compatibility at 100% of the disks I've tested. A list of the TOSEC collection tested disks can be found here. I've also written a small utility which removes the need to re-dump the weak sector protected disks by adding this extra information to the eDSK automatically. You can download a Windows executable here or follow the instructions detailed on the FlashFloppy wiki here. I was impressed enough to decide to permanently replace the internal drives of a couple of my machines, including creating a 3D printed drive caddy as the Gotek case won't fit in a 3' drive bay. Also as there is no file-selector for the ZX Spectrum I added a rotary encoder with OLED display to navigate the files on the USB stick, and topped it off with a sound buzzer to emulate the sound of the original drive. Below is a guide on how I built all of this, heavily utilising the resources of the web, including the parts I used and links to the 3D printed caddy I designed so you can print your own. A lot of the information below is from the FlashFloppy wiki so I highly recommend you read that to get more information and more detailed schematics.