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Update documentation.
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@@ -21,7 +21,8 @@ computer](https://ilesj.wordpress.com/2014/05/14/1541-why-so-complicated/) of
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300 bytes per second (!). (The drive itself could transfer data reasonably
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quickly.)
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A standard 1541 disk has 35 tracks of 17 to 21 sectors, each 256 bytes long.
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A standard 1541 disk has 35 tracks of 17 to 21 sectors, each 256 bytes long
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(sometimes 40 tracks).
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A standard 1581 disk has 80 tracks and two sides, each with 10 sectors, 512
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bytes long.
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@@ -32,13 +33,15 @@ Reading 1541 disks
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Just do:
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```
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fluxengine read commodore1541 -o commodore1541.d64
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fluxengine read commodore1541t35 -o commodore1541.d64
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```
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You should end up with an `commodore1541.d64` file which is 174848 bytes long.
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You can load this straight into a Commodore 64 emulator such as
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[VICE](http://vice-emu.sourceforge.net/).
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If you have a 40-track disk, use `commodore1541t40` instead.
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**Big warning!** Commodore 64 disk images are complicated due to the way the
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tracks are different sizes and the odd sector size, so you need the special D64
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or LDBS output formats to represent them sensibly. Don't use IMG unless you
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@@ -49,9 +52,11 @@ Writing 1541 disks
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Just do:
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```
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fluxengine write commodore1541 -i file.d64
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fluxengine write commodore1541t35 -i file.d64
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```
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If you have a 40-track disk, use `commodore1541t40` instead.
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Note that only standard Commodore 64 BAM file systems can be written this way,
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as the disk ID in the BAM has to be copied to every sector on the disk.
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