On 1/27/2015 6:28 PM, Mark J. Blair wrote:
On Jan 27,
2015, at 15:58 , Mike Stein <mhs.stein at gmail.com> 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.
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 ;-)
If I had
one sitting around, then I might consider using it. But I wouldn't want to borrow one,
especially because I'm much better at starting projects than finishing them. ;)
Could you use an instrumentation recorder's cassette transport? Teac
made cassette systems with 7 and 9 tracks. Ebay item 251372482082
I believe is a 7 track assembly. Or look for one of their complete units
MR-30, MR40 etc. Might be a good starting point for building up
a reader. They are variable speed units also, with a wide range of speeds.
Bob
--
Dentopedalogy is the science of opening your mouth and putting your foot in it.
I've been practising it for years.
-Prince Philip