----- Original Message ----- From: "Brent Hilpert" <hilpert at
cs.ubc.ca>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at
classiccmp.org>
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 7:32 PM
Subject: Re: Destructive Imaging of DECTAPE II Media
On 2015-Jan-27, at 3:58 PM, Mike Stein wrote:
I can't find it at the moment but somewhere I
have a Burroughs digital cassette drive, capstan-less and capable of high-speed
bidirectional seek. AFAIK it uses the standard half-track mono tape format, one track for
data and the other for the clock.
That description fits the tape system used in the HP9830. The tape transport is actually
a "DigiDeck" OEM'd by International Computer Products, out of Dallas,
Texas. The head is non-standard though, in that it R/Ws both half-tracks simultaneously.
Don't know if it'd be useful and not sure
if I want to part with it permanently, but keep it in mind if nothing else works out and
you get desperate ;-)
I don't think it would be of any benefit to the OP's interest over what he
already has to work with.=
----- Reply -----
Probably not, but I thought I'd mention it just in case; it doesn't use a pinch
roller though, and it is completely digital, FWIW.
I don't recall whether it was a DigiDeck, but ISTR that I compared the BBM unit to
another digital deck that was (relatively) popular way back when, and I'm pretty sure
that they were different.
http://www.picklesnet.com/burroughs/images/fullsize/burr0050.jpg
They were mostly used with Burroughs Series L machines, but I think some of the small B
series could also be equipped with them. I've still got a few boxes of utility, game
and program tapes for Burroughs L series machine, but working L's are pretty thin on
the ground so I sometimes toy with building an emulator; that's why I still have the
tapes and the drives (although unfortunately I threw out a lot of paper tapes a long time
ago), but that project is pretty far down on the list...
Can't tell from that pic - can't see internals.
Pics of the 9830 transport well down the page here:
although I should correct my earlier statement: the HP uses 2 half-tracks for 1 bits and 0
bits, not data and clock as you indicate for the Burroughs, but they're still very
similar, the diff would just be in the electronics.