64HDD - PC hard drive for your Commodore 64

xe1541_20080420.jpg

I've been searching for a way to resurrect my old C64 in all its glory, so I can someday try to introduce my son to programming. The two problems I've run into is that I've lost most of my software, and I've only been able to find a couple of blank floppies. It's only an assumption they will still hold data reliably.

I came across the 64HDD project. It's a promising looking solution to my problem, and looks like it's been actively developed since 1999. Using a DOS PC with a parallel port and a xe1541 cable, pictured above, you can supposedly use the PC as a mass storage device for the C64. Essentially, it turns your PC into a 1541 floppy drive emulator, so you can load and save files on your C64 without trying to track down a working 1541 or disk media.

It also means that you could presumably download a bunch of disk images using your broadband connection, shove them onto a hard disk, and then access everything without having to rifle through piles of disks to find the program you want to run.

Has anyone used this before, or do you have any other recommendations or ideas for bringing a legacy system back to life?

64HDD

Posted by Jason Striegel | Apr 20, 2008 08:37 PM
Retro Computing | Permalink | Comments (3) Bookmark and Share

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Posted by: rwx on April 20, 2008 at 9:16 PM

I'd vouch for MMC Replay instead.

http://www.vesalia.de/e_mmcreplay.htm

Just put your stuff on memory card, no need for cables or another computer to depend on.


Posted by: on April 20, 2008 at 10:34 PM

yes. and it works. i use it for several years now - so i can use the great 6581 chip :)

before i found this dos-2-c64 thingi i did it with my amiga - and from my amiga to my pc-harddrive so it was a three-way option.


Posted by: Monsigor Funkibut on April 21, 2008 at 1:11 PM

Old floppies

Don't give up on those old floppies as goners just yet. I decided to back up all my 5.25" disks to CD-RW and I know some of them had not been touched in 20 years and they still all read fine.


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