Toshiba T4600C repair (-)
Well, crap. I can't even test if my HDD is good or not (I have a known-working I can reformat if it isn't), because both the FDD inside my laptop & the spare I recently picked up have spindle drive belts that either slipped off the motor or just lost too much elasticity to grip the motor's spindle. Worse, the FDD is a slim model with ribbon cables, & IDEK if off-brand replacements ever existed. (Using a USB FDD is out because USB didn't exist yet.)
Toshiba T4600C repair (-)
I need a working FDD in this thing to do anything else anyway.
I have a HDD that booted normally a few days ago, but whoever installed Windows 95 on it installed it using a CD drive the lappy doesn't even have a port for. When I go to change anything, it tells me to put the CD into a nonexistent drive.
I have installation floppies I can blow away the janked install with, but that's why I need a working FDD.
Toshiba T4600C repair (~)
Reading online and talking to the indy Radio Shack folks, I'm told I can probably get away with using a rubber band as a temporary replacement belt. I'm sure I can, and now that I know how to dig the floppy drive out, it's something that I could try, but the fewer times I disassemble the laptop all the way from the top shell down to the bottom, the better.
Also, things are starting to look up regarding the mere existence of replacement floppy drive belts.
Toshiba T4600C repair (~)
I just found the strangest advice: Boil the belt in water for about 10 minutes. I have no idea if it'll work, and the one who suggested it never elaborated.
http://www.vcfed.org/forum/showthread.php?47700-T4600C-laptop-floppy-drive-repair
Well, I have a drive of unknown condition with the belt out, a drive that was known working 17 years ago save for a belt now gone slack (but not removed), and an unknown-condition drive on the way. Worst that happens is a belt I already measured breaks apart from really bad advice.
Toshiba T4600C repair [-]
I gave the belt another 10 minutes in a bath of boiling water, and it's just not going to shrink any more. It's done.
I got the other floppy drive, and the belt actually broke at the motor spindle. I guess I did too much "come on please just work" last time I used it. I taped it back together, but only so I can size possible replacements; there's no way it'll ever work again in any belt-driven system, let alone an older floppy drive.
Toshiba T4600C repair [-]
The third drive came in, & it has the same bad belt problem. My last hope for a local source was a belt from a bargain bin, but it's both too big (218 mm) & too thick.
I have 3 Matsushita EME-278TY floppy disk drives, & all 3 have stretched or broken belts. I've never even *seen* a belt-driven 3.5" drive before this month.
Would anyone happen to have 3 thin spindle belts about 214-216 mm in circumference, 1-2 mm wide, and less than 1 mm thick, you could part with?
Toshiba T4600C repair [+?]
I may have underestimated the pre-stretch circumference. I found someone who sells Matsushita FDD belts, giving the circumference as 18 cm, & for about $12 all told. Not bad if it's right, & I'll find out in just a few days.
But if that's right, then the 25 year old belt stretched out another 5 cm in the drive. That's a fantastic amount, but since I pulled them out so easily that they almost fell out on their own, it's also plausible.
The new floppy drive belt is too wide. Everything else is perfect, but it's too wide to sit right in all three channels.
In good news, the seller I got the replacement from has better communication than most businesses. They want me to send both belts (new & bad) to make sure I get the right-width one.
Toshiba T4600C repair [ - ]
Well, that's it. The heads look good & clean, & they're on right, all the cables are firmly seated right, the belt's having no trouble turning the spindle, & all but one of the boot disks I tried are good & readable. I changed drives & moved the belt to it, & same thing. The computer's just refusing to boot.