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Commodore 1541
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=== Introduction === The 1541 was priced at under {{US$|400}} at its introduction. A C64 with a 1541 cost about $900, while an [[Apple II]] with no disk drive cost $1,295. The first 1541 drives produced in 1982 have a label on the front reading VIC-1541 and an off-white case to match the VIC-20. In 1983, the 1541 switched to the familiar beige case and a front label reading simply "1541" along with rainbow stripes to match the Commodore 64. By 1983, a 1541 sold for $300 or less. After a home computer price war instigated by Commodore, the C64 and 1541 together cost under $500.{{citation needed|date=October 2017}} The drive became very popular and difficult to find. The company said that the shortage occurred because 90% of C64 owners bought the 1541 compared to its 30% expectation, but the press discussed what ''[[Creative Computing]]'' described as "an absolutely alarming return rate" because of defects. The magazine reported in March 1984 that it received three defective drives in two weeks,<ref name="anderson198403">{{cite news |url=https://archive.org/stream/creativecomputing-1984-03/Creative_Computing_v10_n03_1984_Mar#page/n57/mode/2up |title=Commodore |work=Creative Computing |date=March 1984 |access-date=2015-02-06 |author-last=Anderson |author-first=John J. |pages=56 |author-link=John J. Anderson}}</ref> and ''[[Compute!'s Gazette]]'' reported in December 1983 that four of the magazine's seven drives had failed; "COMPUTE! Publications sorely needs additional 1541s for in-house use, yet we can't find any to buy. After numerous phone calls over several days, we were able to locate only two units in the entire [[continental United States]]", reportedly because of Commodore's attempt to resolve a manufacturing issue that caused the high failures.<ref name="halfhill198312">{{cite news |url=https://archive.org/stream/1983-12-computegazette/Compute_Gazette_Issue_06_1983_Dec#page/n7/mode/2up |title=The Editor's Notes |work=Compute!'s Gazette |date=December 1983 |access-date=2016-02-06 |author-last=Halfhill |author-first=Tom |pages=6 |type=editorial}}</ref> The early (1982 to 1983) 1541s have a spring-eject mechanism ([[Alps Electric|Alps]] drive), and the disks often fail to release. This style of drive has the popular nickname "Toaster Drive", because it requires the use of a knife or other hard thin object to pry out the stuck media,{{Citation needed|date=February 2021}} just like a piece of [[Toast (food)|toast]] stuck in an actual [[toaster]]. This was fixed later when Commodore changed the vendor of the drive mechanism ([[Mitsumi]]) and adopted the flip-lever Newtronics mechanism, greatly improving reliability. In addition, Commodore made the drive's controller board smaller and reduced its chip count compared to the early 1541s (which had a large [[printed circuit board|PCB]] running the length of the case, with dozens of [[transistor–transistor logic|TTL chips]]). The beige-case Newtronics 1541 was produced from 1984 to 1986.
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