ZX Microdrive
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The ZX Microdrive was a magnetic tape data storage system launched in July 1983 by Sinclair Research for the ZX Spectrum home computer. The Microdrive technology was later also used in the Sinclair QL and ICL One Per Desk personal computers. The primary engineer behind the Microdrive was Ben Cheese.
Typically of Sinclair Research, the ZX Microdrive was comparatively cheap (£49.95 at launch) and technologically innovative but also rather limited. Connection of a ZX Microdrive to a ZX Spectrum was done via the ZX Interface 1 unit, which was sold separately at £49.95 or at £79.95 when bought with a Microdrive. Later, in March 1985, a Microdrive plus Interface 1 bundle called the ZX Spectrum Expansion System was sold for £99.95. The bundle included four Microdrive cartridges: the Tasword Two word processor plus Masterfile filing system, Quicksilva's Games Designer and Ant Attack game, an introductory cartridge, and a blank. A total of eight ZX Microdrive units could be connected to the Interface 1 by daisy chaining one drive to the next via flat-ribbon cables.
Microdrives used tiny (44 × 34 × 8 mm including protective cover) cartridges containing a 5 m (200 inch) endless loop of video tape, 1.9 mm wide, driven at 76 cm/second (30 in/second); thus performing a complete circuit in approximately 8 seconds. The cartridges held a minimum of 85 kB when formatted on a ZX Microdrive (exact capacity depended on the number of "bad" sectors found and the precise speed of the Microdrive motor when formatting). The data retrieval rate was 15 kB/s (i.e., 120 kbit/s). It is possible to 'expand' the capcity of a fresh microdrive cartridge by formatting it several times. This causes the tape to stretch slightly, increasing the length of the tape loop so that more sectors can be marked out on it. This procedure was widely documented in the Sinclair community magazines of the 1980s.[citation needed]
Unfortunately, the system acquired a reputation for unreliability, and the cartridges were relatively expensive (initially sold for £4.95 each, later reduced to £1.99). Similar technology was used in other devices, such as the Rotronics Wafadrive, and was sometimes known as a "stringy floppy".
Microdrives were also used as the native storage medium of the Sinclair QL, which incorporated two internal drives. These were very similar to the ZX Microdrive, but used a different logical format that allowed each cartridge to hold at least 100 kB. The QL also included a Microdrive expansion bus allowing the attachment of up to six external QL Microdrives. These were never produced, probably due to lack of demand.
In addition to the QL versions, dual internal Microdrives were included in the related ICL One Per Desk system (also badged as the Merlin Tonto and Telecom Australia Computerphone). These drives were re-engineered by ICL for greater reliability, and used a format incompatible with both ZX and QL Microdrives.
[edit] External links
- ZX Microdrive information – At Planet Sinclair
- Sinclair User, April 1985, News section
Magnetic tape data storage formats | ||
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Linear | Helical-Scan | |
Three Quarter Inch (~19 mm) |
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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) |
|
Quarter Inch (6.35 mm) |
||
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) |