Quick addendum in the video: Turns out the purple disk is actually a standard Mitsumi Quick Disk (the floppy disk format FDS games were based on), but with an additional plastic piece stuck on the bottom so that it can be accepted by an FDS drive! I did not realize that piece came off until shortly after this video went live!
Did you know that Roland also made a Disk compatible with the FDS called QD (Quick Disk) for its sequencers like the MT-100 (MT-32 + Sequencer) , just needed to extend the "NINTENDO" piece to make it fit
@@bootmii98 Yep, but also more along the lines of something like a Sharp X1, NEC PC-8801 series, and/or MSX. There was an episode of Masahiro Sakurai on Creating Games where he mentioned developing on an original Mac, so I'm sure other developers developed on Macs too, maybe even PCs or Commodore 64/128.
The video footage use is from NTSC co, a shop located in Golden Shopping Centre. The video is my friend Mr. Mak's Dad he passed away and left the store to his son, I call him Mak for short have known him since 1992 and he's still in business after all these years. I used to supply CDR master Snes rom copies to many shop back then. Why keep a drawer of floppies 650x1.44mb vs 1cdrom ? Back then I also had a shop just across Golden. Also back then only a certain FDS drive could be made to write to disk and a Parallel link with software (I still have) writes directly to FDS. Nice and easy. Each blank disk inc white clear case, paper sleeve and photo cover (Back then copor copy wasn't a thing) would sell for $10 HKD.
Taking a close look at the photo of the replacement cleaning cartridge at 4:28, it seems to be a microfiber cloth on a roll? Which would make sense as it usually isn't the best idea to apply liquids directly onto the magnetic material, the closest thing I can think of as an equivalent to the material is the official apple cleaning cloth. (Yes really)
It is definitely a dry cleaning thing, not sure if it's cloth though if it just sorta disintegrated over time. I used alcohol because it is one of the many claimed ways to clean floppy disks online, as long as it's sufficiently dried before being put into a drive
I saw one of those disk cleaners on eBay and almost bought it just cuz. I don't even have a Famicom, much less an FDS! 🤣 I would open up the cleaning cartridge and try to replace the cleaning strip with a strip of 'non-woven cellulose wipe' 🤔 lol, speaking of the diskwriter, I saw an official disk card storage case made to look like the diskwriter kiosk. 😂
This is gonna be very random to say but, very recently i obtained my own used Card Cleaner unit and it also included a very dry wax-feeling cleaning cartridge which absolutely was pass its use date. I had obtain some broken FDS Disks recently and from that entire lot i only conserved two, one that does work but requires re-writing due to constant Err.27 messages and general unstable behavior, and another that has something that *visibly* looks like a dent in the media itself and didn't detect either side with Err.22 and 21 being the most common for it. I decided to use that last disk as sacrifice and after spraying alcohol to the wax cleaning material proceeded to do something I absolutely should've never done and messed completely with it as much as i could and eventually managed to use part of that wax with the magnetic surface and clean the remains of it off the surface with some alcohol pads. To my uttermost shock and still confusion, Side B properly gets recognized and Side A now only reports Err.27 with the dent still visible, I will still have to wait until i obtain a FDSKey to see if each side can be rewritten and read off but I'm genuinely shocked that something like this even worked.
Thank you for showing these off! It's so cool to see not video game gaming stuff documented :) I really love the Nintendo cleaning kits cuz some of them are delightfully wonky like the Wii and Game Boy ones ;u; always glad to see these kits get some love!
Could you someday make a video on how to hook up foreign consoles. And things like Voltage changers and cables you recommend to make it work outside its original county?
Quick addendum in the video: Turns out the purple disk is actually a standard Mitsumi Quick Disk (the floppy disk format FDS games were based on), but with an additional plastic piece stuck on the bottom so that it can be accepted by an FDS drive! I did not realize that piece came off until shortly after this video went live!
Did you know that Roland also made a Disk compatible with the FDS called QD (Quick Disk) for its sequencers like the MT-100 (MT-32 + Sequencer) , just needed to extend the "NINTENDO" piece to make it fit
That somehow made me imagine what the official SDK for the FDS could've been like.
@@kbhasiSomething like a Commodore computer or Apple II with a Mitsumi drive?
@@bootmii98
Yep, but also more along the lines of something like a Sharp X1, NEC PC-8801 series, and/or MSX. There was an episode of Masahiro Sakurai on Creating Games where he mentioned developing on an original Mac, so I'm sure other developers developed on Macs too, maybe even PCs or Commodore 64/128.
I literally got one of these in the mail this week, small world!
The video footage use is from NTSC co, a shop located in Golden Shopping Centre. The video is my friend Mr. Mak's Dad he passed away and left the store to his son, I call him Mak for short have known him since 1992 and he's still in business after all these years. I used to supply CDR master Snes rom copies to many shop back then. Why keep a drawer of floppies 650x1.44mb vs 1cdrom ? Back then I also had a shop just across Golden. Also back then only a certain FDS drive could be made to write to disk and a Parallel link with software (I still have) writes directly to FDS. Nice and easy. Each blank disk inc white clear case, paper sleeve and photo cover (Back then copor copy wasn't a thing) would sell for $10 HKD.
Do you have pictures or videos of this parallel link software? I would love to try it!
Taking a close look at the photo of the replacement cleaning cartridge at 4:28, it seems to be a microfiber cloth on a roll? Which would make sense as it usually isn't the best idea to apply liquids directly onto the magnetic material, the closest thing I can think of as an equivalent to the material is the official apple cleaning cloth. (Yes really)
It is definitely a dry cleaning thing, not sure if it's cloth though if it just sorta disintegrated over time. I used alcohol because it is one of the many claimed ways to clean floppy disks online, as long as it's sufficiently dried before being put into a drive
13:40 this belongs in a museum
I would love to see this 6:16 in one as well
im just gonna pray this is in the nintendo museum
Whoa, the disk cleaning was cool but just seeing a FDS in action was probably the best part
Just when I thought I knew everything about Nintendo accessories...
I forgot about the Bob-omb that owns an FDS...
This N64 cartridge has seen things 0:14
I love your videos, man. Such good content and a fresh perspective
6:16 i laughed so hard my soul came out of my body
I saw one of those disk cleaners on eBay and almost bought it just cuz. I don't even have a Famicom, much less an FDS! 🤣
I would open up the cleaning cartridge and try to replace the cleaning strip with a strip of 'non-woven cellulose wipe' 🤔 lol, speaking of the diskwriter, I saw an official disk card storage case made to look like the diskwriter kiosk. 😂
You need to be careful, the alcohol in the pads might be dissolving the glue for the protective felt inside the disk.
This is gonna be very random to say but, very recently i obtained my own used Card Cleaner unit and it also included a very dry wax-feeling cleaning cartridge which absolutely was pass its use date.
I had obtain some broken FDS Disks recently and from that entire lot i only conserved two, one that does work but requires re-writing due to constant Err.27 messages and general unstable behavior, and another that has something that *visibly* looks like a dent in the media itself and didn't detect either side with Err.22 and 21 being the most common for it. I decided to use that last disk as sacrifice and after spraying alcohol to the wax cleaning material proceeded to do something I absolutely should've never done and messed completely with it as much as i could and eventually managed to use part of that wax with the magnetic surface and clean the remains of it off the surface with some alcohol pads.
To my uttermost shock and still confusion, Side B properly gets recognized and Side A now only reports Err.27 with the dent still visible, I will still have to wait until i obtain a FDSKey to see if each side can be rewritten and read off but I'm genuinely shocked that something like this even worked.
id love to know where that disk copying footage at 7:45 came from
Thank you for showing these off! It's so cool to see not video game gaming stuff documented :) I really love the Nintendo cleaning kits cuz some of them are delightfully wonky like the Wii and Game Boy ones ;u; always glad to see these kits get some love!
Could you someday make a video on how to hook up foreign consoles. And things like Voltage changers and cables you recommend to make it work outside its original county?
I'm glad I watched this video before investing in a Famicom Disk system.
Pretty sure that weird thing you pulled out was like a part of the famicon that fell out so it wouldent have been able to boot anyway
This is super cool!
whoa that looks so cool
I guess i got lucky with my fds head cleaner spray and it was shipped to me in the U.S. from japan
Is there no way to open these disks and clean them like carts?
Does anyone know were the kirby clip in the intro comes from?
I gotcha!
th-cam.com/video/NrK_Z8zDlgo/w-d-xo.html
@@Akfamilyhome thank you i serioisly love cute stuff and random japanese comeircal crap is always that
wow
6:17 perfect ad timing
Why do you live in Hong Kong?
Hello Akfamilyhome how are you
Don't Eat 1:17
6:15
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