No.
Floppy drives do not typically need drivers. Any operating system on a typical PC can interface with the floppy controller integrated into the motherboard. All modern operating systems include drivers to interface with drives connected via USB.
If your system has a floppy drive you can use another computer to place the needed driver on a floppy disk an then reinstall them.You could use a USB drive to transfer the drivers to the computer if no floppy drive is present.There are also several ways to connect a second computer to the faulty system so the needed drivers can be transferred and installed.
Because of the low data storage.. Normally FDD stores only 1.44 MB of data and printer drivers could need more space..
You'll need to get on a computer that has connectivity and download the drivers from there, then burn them to CD (or floppy if small enough), and then use that to install the needed driver.
For some motherboard you have to preinstall AHCI drivers. You have to check the motherboard manufacture website and download drivers for SATA controller. And when you are installing xp during first seconds of installation when you see that the OS is asking for drivers something like "Press F6 to install addtional drivers". You have to press F6 and prepare a floppy disk with the AHCI driver on it. thne just install drivers from the floppy and it will allow xp to see and work with the hard drive.
=floppy bunnies==floppy bunnies==floppy bunnies=
Most modern laptops do not have space for a floppy drive internally, so this is impossible on them. If you have an old laptop that has space for a floppy drive internally, it probably already has one so you don't need to install one. However if that existing internal floppy drive has failed you will have to replace it (assuming you can find a floppy drive to replace it with). To replace the existing internal floppy drive you will need the manufacturer's documents on how to open the laptop's case, get access to the floppy drive, and swap out the old one and replace it with the new one. This will almost certainly require special tools (e.g. torx drivers, wrenches) that you don't already have and will need to buy if you don't already frequently do such work.
in a floppy drive, a small pin hits the area where that little switch is on the floppy. if it passes through, the floppy drive detects the floppy as write/read. it it doesn't pass through, the floppy drive detects the floppy as read only
what is a floppy disc
a floppy disk slot is what you put the floppy disk in on a CPU
Floppy disks.