On Nov 12, 2015, at 8:47 AM, Johnny Billquist <bqt
at update.uu.se> wrote:
On 2015-11-12 14:24, Tom Moss wrote:
I've had very mixed (about 50/50) success
with 9-track, but after reading a
bit about DECtape it looks like they should still be holding up nicely.
Anyone care to share their experiences?
Not sure what there is to share. I've yet to encounter a DECtape I couldn't read.
You're right, DECtape is extremely reliable. That makes sense: the tape is a
sandwich, with the oxide underneath a mylar cover.
My boss in college (a former and subsequent DEC OS developer) told me the same thing you
did, that he'd never seen a DECtape fail. Not even the one that was accidentally
laundered (in some pants pockets), or the one that came loose from the hub and rolled all
over the sawdust covered floor of the DEC mill building.
But I told him that I had seen some fail, and he saw it too. This was in college. We had
an early RSTS system where DECtapes were used as public storage (to supplement the RK05
system disk). Those were so busy that they did eventually wear out. Sometimes they could
be reformatted to bring them back to life, sometimes not.
And yes, between the redundant tracks and the physical construction of the tape, you
should expect DECtapes to be perfectly readable even today.
paul