I just did some tests: the SD HxC seems indeed to work pretty fine on the Emulator III !
- Booting from "floppy", reading sounds from "floppy" and formatting a "floppy" works 100 pct fine with the SD HxC as floppy emulator.
- Writing soundbanks to "floppy" seems however a bit unstable; the EIII often complains with a "floppy drive failure" error after having written a part of the disk. I had to restart the saving of a bank four times before the EIII could successfully complete a full "floppy disk" write on the SD HxC.
Fortunately saving banks will not be the most popular usage of the HxC; that will most probably be booting the machine. For backup up the OS and calibration settings to the SD card, the write errors may occur too, in that case it also seems just a matter of retrying a few times until it succeeds...
Anyway, if I find time, I will check this issue with Jeff - perhaps it's only a small problem which can easily be fixed or bypassed.
FYI:
- the SD HxC can simply be connected to the original 34 pin floppy ribbon cable and floppy power cable of the EIII
- the jumper of the SD HxC should be set to ID0/DriveA
- in the HxC software the SD settings should have "Generic Shugart" as interface mode before creating .hfe files for the EIII
- the SD card should of course be ready for use in SD HxC (see SD HxC manual: format the card as FAT32 and save a hxcsdfe.cfg file to it)
- saving EIII "floppy disks" (.hfe files) on the SD card can be done with the "load raw image" button in the HxC windows software. Press this button, set the GAP to a number lower than 48 (e.g. 47), set the number of sectors per track to 10 and press the "load image" button to select an existing 800K EIII image (*) from your pc harddisk. Then press the "export" button to save this disk to an .hfe file on your SD card. That's it.
(*) 800K images of existing EIII floppy disks can be created with OmniFlop on a Windows PC with internal floppy drive; an 800K image for a bootable EIII disk (OS 2.42) can be downloaded from
http://www.emxp.net, BUT be aware that this image does not necessarily contain the correct calibration settings for *your* particular EIII - see other threads on this forum with remarks by Dr.C about this.