DECtape
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DECtape was a magnetic tape storage medium used with early Digital Equipment Corporation computers, including the PDP-6, PDP-8, LINC-8, PDP-10, PDP-11, PDP-12, and the PDP-15. DECtapes were 3/4 inch wide and formatted into blocks of data that could be read or written individually. One tape stored 184K 12-bit PDP-8 words. Block size was 128 words. From a programming point of view, DECtape behaved like a very slow disk drive.
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DECtape was designed to be reliable and durable enough to be used as the main storage medium for an operating system. It was possible, if slow, to use a DECtape drive to run a small OS such as OS/8 or OS/12. The system knew enough to put temporary files on a second DECtape drive as to not slow down access to the main drive with the system programs.
The design of DECtape and its controllers was quite different from any other type of tape drive or controller. Physically DECtape used dual-redundancy to keep the error rate low. Each bit was written twice across the width of the tape, using Manchester encoding (PE). During read, the two read heads for each bit were wired in series, so the resultant output was the sum of the two bit amplitudes. This meant a "drop-out" on one channel could be tolerated. You could even punch a hole in the tape with a 1/4 inch hole punch and that area would read correctly!
On the PDP-12 the DECtape drives were tightly integrated into the LINC CPU instruction set. There were simple LINC instructions, single instructions, for reading and writing tape blocks.
DECtape had its origin in the LINCtape tape system, which was originally designed by Wesley Clark at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory as an integral part of the LINC computer. The design of the LINC, including LINCtape, was in the public domain, and LINCtape drives were manufactured by several companies, including Digital. DECtape used the same transport mechanism as LINCtape, but the tape was run in the opposite direction, thus the supply and takeup reels were reversed. Mechanical dimensions, speeds, and signal characteristics were identical, and at least one system, the PDP-12 (with the TC12-F option), was capable of using either LINCtape or DECtape on the same transport.
While LINCtape was designed to support high-speed bidirectional block search, it only supported actual data read and write operations in the forward direction. DECtape used a significantly different mark track format to provide for the possibility of read and write operations in either direction. Some but not all DECtape controllers supported reverse read. This bidirectional data transfer capability is the subject of US Patent 3,387,293.
[edit] DECtape II
DECtape II was introduced around 1979 and had a similar block structure, but on a special, pre-formatted DC150 miniature cartridge tape. The TU58 DECtape II drive had an RS232 serial interface, allowing it to be used with the ordinary serial ports that were very common on Digital's contemporary processors. As a result, the TU58 was fitted to several different systems (including the PDP-11/24 and /44 and the VAX-11/730 and /750) as a commonly-available device for loading diagnostic programs. The first version of the TU58 imposed very severe timing constraints on the unbuffered UARTs then being used by Digital but a later firmware revision eased the flow-control problems. The RT11 single-user operating system could be bootstrapped from a TU58 but the relatively slow access time of the tape drive made use of the system challenging.
The TU58 was also used with other computers, such as the Automatix Autovision machine vision system and AI32 robot controller. TU58 drivers are available for modern PCs.
[edit] See also
- LINC - additional material on LINCtape lineage and operation
[edit] External link
Magnetic tape data storage formats | ||
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Linear | Helical-Scan | |
Three Quarter Inch (~19 mm) |
LINCtape (1962) - DECtape (1963) |
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Half Inch (12.65 mm) |
UNISERVO (1951) - IBM 7 Track (1952) - 9 Track (1964) - IBM 3480 (1984) - DLT (1984) - IBM 3590 (1995) - T9840 (1998) - T9940 (2000) - LTO Ultrium (2000) - T10000 (2006) |
Redwood SD-3 (1995) - DTF (19xx) - SAIT (2003) |
Eight Millimeter (8 mm) |
Travan (1995) - IBM 3570 MP (1997) |
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Quarter Inch (6.35 mm) |
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Eighth Inch (3.81 mm) |
KC Standard, Compact Cassette (1975) - DC100 (1976) - Datassette (1977) - DECtapeII (1979) |
DDS/DAT (1989) |
Stringy (1.58 - 1.9 mm) |
Exatron Stringy Floppy (1979) - ZX Microdrive (1983) - Rotronics Wafadrive (1984) |