![]() (DOSBox’s floppy emulation isn’t good enough for LOADDSKF, but DOSBox-X’s is.)Īlternatively, using QEMU, you can avoid generating intermediary images entirely you’ll need a proper DOS setup, including your disk images and LOADDSKF. cp target.img /dev/sdX, replacing X as appropriate (on Linux you’d use different commands on Windows). ![]() This will produce a target.img file containing the raw sector dump, which you can then copy to your actual disk using your floppy drive, e.g. unmount the target image: imgmount -u a.“load” the SaveDskF image onto the “floppy”: loaddskf source.dsk a:.mount a 1474560-byte image as a floppy: imgmount -t floppy a target.img.place LOADDSKF.EXE and your floppy images in a directory.I don’t know of such a tool off-hand, but you can run LOADDSKF in an emulator to write your image to a sector image. ![]() If your images are 1440KiB images, then all that’s needed is to extract the raw sector image, and write it using cp or any other tool capable of writing to a block device (which even includes the shell). USB floppy drives only support a limited set of disk formats: 720KiB (on DD floppies only), 1440KiB (“standard” HD), and in some cases, 1232KiB (“mode 3”, the format used on X68000 systems) and 1200KiB (so that 5.25” HD images can be written).
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