Tor wrote:
If your 720kB floppies have been stored reasonably well (I've kept most of my tapes and floppies in the office for decades now, seems good enough), you should be ok unless you were unlucky with the floppy vendor. Make sure you get a drive that can read 720kB though.. not all USB drives can do that. I bought a TEAC FD 05-PUW (IIRC) which also reads 720kB, a couple of years back.
A quick followup. Today I finally got my hands on a USB floppy drive (through Amazon from a manufacturer called HDE). Curiously Windows 10 didn't understand my Atari ST disks, claiming them as unformatted. Attaching to a VMWare VM running Fedora Linux (where I run Hatari - my Atari ST emulator), the disks read just fine. It was fun to see my old 68k code from '86. I even assembled and ran a few proto games. Nostalgiagasm ensued.
I just wanted to thank you for your advice w.r.t being careful to choose a drive that supports 720kB disks. This drive reports as a TEAC (whether or not it is I suppose doesn't matter), but I was very careful to select from only drives that claimed support for 720kB and then I read the Amazon reviews for indications that they'd actually work.
I'm sure it wouldn't have occurred to me that some drives couldn't read 720kB formatted disks. So, thanks Tor, and thanks to others for encouraging me to try to read from these old disks. I almost couldn't believe there's be valid data there.