Those
photos that Ray found are timely, since I have a mind to service my Twiggy drives. I thought I'd check---has anyone got any tips?
Like most floppy drives of their age, the moving parts in mine are dusty and likely no longer as free-moving as they once were. Some cleaning preventive lubrication seems worthwhile. There are also a few axial electrolytic capacitors in the drives as well, which I plan to check in-circuit with an ESR meter---although I'm usually a pretty proactive recapper, I am more inclined to take a "watch and wait" approach for these boards.
Molykote EM-30L has been recommended on other forums as a good specialty grease for lubricating floppy drive mechanisms, particularly around plastic parts. It contains lithium grease as an ingredient, which is another common choice. The
Twiggy Manufacturing Instructions on Bitsavers meanwhile, suggests that the rails for the head carriages may have used teflon grease, or were perhaps permanently coated somehow? (PDF page 32: "Make sure the guide rails are teflon coated").* Later on (page 56), it actually mentions using good old Tri-Flow teflon lube on the stepper motor lead screw.
(The manufacturing instructions have other encouraging notes like the one attached, and they reveal also that there are parts of the drive called "the serpent", "the froggy", and "the alien".)
My aims are to get rid of dust on moving parts at least, clean the heads, lubricate where appropriate, and inspect parts that seem perishable (e.g. foam pads, drive belts)---even though I am not sure what they ought to be replaced with if they seem degraded.
In any case, I thought I'd ask around here to see if anyone had any thoughts about this kind of work, or suggestions. Does anyone know of any other resources for servicing overcomplicated floppy drives
extremely carefully?
* Funnily enough, I got in touch with the author of that document... sensibly enough he can't recall whether it was grease or a coating.