Superformatting pushes floppy disks to their physical limits by altering how sectors, tracks, and gaps are arranged. Using specialized software like superformat (part of the Linux
fdutils package), a standard High-Density (HD) floppy can sometimes be formatted up to 1992
KiB, and an Extra-High Density (ED) disk up to 3984 KiB.
Rotation speed sensitivity High-capacity formats are incredibly sensitive to the exact rotation speed of the floppy drive and the resulting difference in raw data capacity. Because of this, advanced superformatting tools perform a live measurement of the drive's raw capacity before proceeding. To save time on subsequent formats, this deviation can be calculated and stored in system configuration files (such as /etc/driveprm on Linux).
"2m" formats Superformatting often makes use of
2m formats. These formats were specifically designed to hold MS-DOS filesystems by taking advantage of data redundancy. The standard MS-DOS filesystem stores two copies of the
File Allocation Table (FAT). To save space, superformatting software can drop the second copy of the FAT from the physical disk, banking on the reliability of the first copy. == Advanced sector configuration ==