Working with Old Tapes
Paul Koning
paulkoning at comcast.net
Wed Oct 17 13:10:01 CDT 2018
> On Oct 17, 2018, at 2:05 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 10/17/18 10:51 AM, Jeffrey S. Worley via cctalk wrote:
>
>> Cleaning the head from time to time may get you through a read of a
>> tape for backup purposes, but there is a machine called a 'tape
>> cleaner' which is a drive which leads the tape through a path seeded
>> with knife-edges. As the tape travels through the machine, the knife
>> edges scrape a layer of oxide coating from the tape and smooths and
>> polishes the surface exposed. This will restore a tape to full
>> usability and should not affect data stored on the tape.
>>
>
> "Tape Scrapers" do exactly that. Bake the tapes first, preferably with
> a lot of moving air before attempting to "clean" a tape. If you don't
> all you will do is scrape off the binder.
>
> Their original purpose was to remove surface debris, NOT cut a layer
> of binder off.
The 1/2 inch tape drives I'm familiar with incorporate such a device. Typically it's a ceramic thing, so it looks like a small shiny white rectangle near the heads. It has to be scrubbed clean periodically when it gets brown from accumulated ferrite dust.
paul
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