Path: utzoo!utgpu!utstat!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!wuarchive!texbell!merch!cpe!adaptex!neese From: neese@adaptex.UUCP Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions Subject: Re: Cartridge tape questions Message-ID: <6900002@adaptex> Date: 28 Oct 89 16:35:00 GMT References: <169@iquery.UUCP> Lines: 33 Nf-ID: #R:iquery.UUCP:169:adaptex:6900002:000:1698 Nf-From: adaptex.UUCP!neese Oct 28 11:35:00 1989 >I'm confused about quarter-inch cartridge tape drives. I read that there are >40MB, 60MB, 120MB, & 150MB tape drives. I read about "standards" like QIC-24 >and QIC-40. I hear that some are SCSI, some aren't. I know about tape >cartridges like DC300A, DC300XL/P, DC600A and so on. I hear that some tape >drives can read tapes created on other, different capacity drives. I know >that sometimes you have to swap bytes when loading tapes made on different >drives. And then there's my AT&T 3B2 machine that uses a "streaming" tape >that must be formatted before it can be written to. > >Can someone fill out a table like the following for me to help me understand >this quagmire? Many thanks in advance. > > Tape Drive SCSI or QIC Type of Can read Swap > Capacity NOT Standard? Cartridge tapes sized bytes? > >My real reason for asking is that we want to get a quarter-inch tape drive for >a 386 *NIX machine that is as portable as possible (i.e., we'd like to be able >to make tapes on this machine that can be read on the widest possible variety >of other *NIX machines). QIC refers more to the data format than to the actual interface. With a SCSI tape drive their is also a QIC standard data format. For instance, I have a Cipher ST-150S SCSI 1/4" Tape drive that reads/writes data in QIC-120 (DC-600A) and QIC-150 (DC-600XTD, DC-6150) data formats. It will also read QIC-60 data formats (DC-600A). Whether or not the interface is a SCSI or a QIC controller, has no bearing on the data format. Hope this helps. Roy Neese Adaptec Central Field Applications Engineer UUCP @ {texbell,attctc}!cpe!adaptex!neese merch!adaptex!neese