Difference between revisions of "ADL/Disk Images"

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Revision as of 09:18, 20 July 2019

Most ADL games do not have file systems on their floppy disks. As a result, disk images need to be used to play these games in ScummVM. The detection mechanism of the ADL engine uses sector data to recognize these disk images. This means that as long as the base name is the same, any supported floppy image format can be used. For example, if Datafiles lists MYSTERY.DSK as the disk image name for the game you want to play, you can use either MYSTERY.DSK, MYSTERY.NIB, MYSTERY.WOZ etc. You can find more information on the supported formats below.

Apple II Floppy image formats

.DSK

This is a raw disk image format with 16 sectors per track. The file size is always 143360 bytes.

.D13

This is a raw disk image format with 13 sectors per track. The file size is always 116480 bytes. This format is not commonly supported by disk conversion tools.

.NIB

This format contains so-called nibbles and is able to capture some of the tricks performed by copy protections. It supports both 13- and 16-sector disks. The file size is always 232960 bytes.

.WOZ

More information on this new disk image format can be found at [1]. This format should be able to fully capture any copy-protected disk, allowing emulators to run copy-protected software.

Transferring data from Apple II floppies

Using an Apple II computer

Later ADL games and budget releases without copy-protection can probably be transferred with ADTPro and a serial cable. If the game uses the older 13-sector formatting and/or has a copy-protection that prevents ADTPro from seeing all the data, it may be necessary to first use a tool called Saltine's Super Transcopy and then transfer the resulting disks with ADTPro. Note that even if a copy-protected disk is successfully transferred using this method, it probably won't work in an Apple II emulator, but it should work in ScummVM.