Scalable Linear Recording
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scalable Linear Recording is the name used by Tandberg Data for its line of QIC based tape drives.
The earliest SLR drive, the SLR1, has a capacity of 250 MB, while the latest drive, the SLR140, has a capacity of 140 GB compressed (70 GB uncompressed, or native). The term SLR is now often used to refer to QIC tapes, as they are the only drives still manufactured that use them.
Contents |
[edit] Generations
[edit] Quarter inch formats
Generation | SLR1 | SLR2 | SLR3 | SLR4 | SLR4-DC | SLR5 | SLR24 SLR6 |
SLR32 MLR1 |
SLR50 MLR3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Release Date | 1986 | 1988 | 1990 | 1992 | 1997 | 1996 | 1997 | ||
Data Capacity | 250 MB | 525 MB | 1 GB | 2.5 GB | 4 GB | 12 GB | 16 GB | 20 GB | |
Transfer Rate (kB/s) | 84.8 | 199 | 197 | 296 | 280 | 387 | 1200 | 1500 | 2000 |
Tape Length (m) | 462 |
NOTE: MLR stands for Multi-channel Linear Recording.
[edit] Eight millimeter formats
Generation | SLR7 | SLR40 | SLR60 | SLR75 | SLR100 | SLR140 | SLR200 | SLR400 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Release Date | 1997 | 2003 | TBA | TBA | ||||
Data Capacity | 20 GB | 30 GB | 38 GB | 50 GB | 70 GB | 100 GB | 200 GB | |
Transfer Rate (kB/s) | 3000 | 2500 | 4000 | 4300 | 5000 | 6000 | 16000 | 32000 |
Tape Length (m) | 466 | 274 | 350.5 | 457 | 506 |
[edit] External links
Magnetic tape data storage formats | ||
---|---|---|
Linear | Helical-Scan | |
Three Quarter Inch (~19 mm) |
||
Half Inch (12.65 mm) |
UNISERVO (1951) - IBM 7 Track (1952) - IBM 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) |
QIC (1972) - SLR (1986) |
|
Four Millimeter (3.8 mm) |
DDS/DAT (1989) |
|
One Eighth Inch (3.18 mm) |
KC Standard, Compact Cassette (1975) - Datassette (1977) |
|
Stringy (1.58 - 1.9 mm) |
Exatron Stringy Floppy (1979) - ZX Microdrive (1983) - Rotronics Wafadrive (1984) |