On 3/7/23 17:32, Paul Koning wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Mar 7, 2023, at 8:23 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
>> wrote:
>>
>> On 3/7/23 17:04, Zane Healy via cctalk wrote:
>>> I’m working on a project, and I need to know the age of various tape 
>>> formats.  For example when were 6250bpi 700’ 9-Track tapes or DC600A 
>>> cartridges introduced?  Is there any good resource online that documents 
>>> this?  Wikipedia is of some help, but the older you go, the spottier it is
>>
>> Strictly speaking out of an orifice, I'd suggest that 9 track tapes in
>> NRZI and PE first came around with the IBM 2400 series tapes, GCR with
>> the 3400.
> 
> Was IBM the first for each of these?

For 9 track tapes, definitely.  7 track, that would go back to the IBM
726, but that was only 100 bpi.  Later members of the series increase
density.  My experience is that with 7 track, the density matters mostly
with writing.   A drive set to 800 or 556 bpi can easily read 200 bpi.


> I added the 14-track CDC drives to the Wikipedia article a while ago.  And 
> I've been learning a bit about the oddball 10 track 1/2 inch tapes used on 
> the Electrologica X1 (and, apparently, on the Eliott (UK) as well).  The X1 
> tape is unusual in that it's somewhat like DECtape -- it supports random 
> rewriting but with variable length blocks limited by a size limit set at 
> format time rather than a single fixed block size.

There were several vendor-specific tape formats early on, generally not
interchangeable between vendor equipment, so I won't count those.

--Chuck


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