Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,550,395 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

New Light On Tape Technologies.


Demystification of tape technologies

This article is the second in a two-part series. The first part appeared in the December 2000 issue of CTR.

Sony's AIT technology has gained strong market acceptance in recent years based on its high capacity, fast data access, and low price. The current generation, AIT-2, offers customers 50GB of native capacity on a compact 8mm cartridge using Advanced Metal Evaporated tape. The innovative Memory-in-Cassette feature stores tape file directory information on a memory chip that the drive can read directly and then go to that exact location on the tape. This capability dramatically decreases file search and access times. Sony recently announced mid-2001 availability for their next generation AIT drive, AIT-3. It will provide 100GB of native capacity The raw capacity of a device. The storage capacity of backup tapes is often published as compressed storage in order to sound larger. It is typically expressed as twice the native capacity. The actual capacity may be less than or exceed the published figure, because different types of data compress at different rates. Text files generally compress to approximately 40% of their original size. and 12MB/sec data rate fulfilling Sony's roadmap projecting a doubling of capacity and throughput every two years.

Overland's AIT Library-Pro--the company's first AIT product--was also the industry's first modular scalable AIT library, offering more than 20TB of compressed capacity. Overland has announced intentions to offer an AIT-3 version of the LibraryPro when it is available in 2001.

Mammoth

As another high-capacity format seeking to take market share from the industry leader DLT, Exabyte's Mammoth 2 is currently the highest-capacity helical scan Helical Scan
The helical scan method uses a rotating head and diagonal tracks, which allows a slow-traveling tape to provide a very fast transfer rate. The tape is pulled out of the cartridge and wrapped around the read/write head.




Helical Scan Formats
As you can see from this illustration, there are numerous helical scan formats used for digital storage.
 format available with a native capacity of 60GB and a native transfer rate of 12MB/sec. With similar pricing to DLT 8000 yet offering 50 percent higher capacity, Mammoth 2 has emerged as yet another competitor for midrange and enterprise tape automation applications.

4mm DAT

DDS DDS - Doctor of Dental Surgery
DDS - Daily Departmental Schedule
DDS - Dartmouth Dining Service (Dartmouth College)
DDS - Data Delivery Service
DDS - Data Description Specification
DDS - Data Design System
DDS - Data Dictionary System
DDS - Data Display System/Subsystem
DDS - Data Distribution Service
DDS - Data Distribution System
DDS - Dataphone Digital Service
DDS - Dawn Duelists Society (British association for historical swordplay)
-4 is the latest incarnation of 4mm DAT technology based on the Digital Data Storage (DDS) standard. Aimed at workgroup departmental server applications rather than midrange and enterprise markets targeted by AIT and Mammoth, DDS-4 provides 20GB of native capacity on a single DAT cartridge while boosting data rate performance to 3MB/sec. Overland is a major player in the DDS market with the WangDAT 9400 Series available in the DDS-4 format. Overland also offers WangDAT models in DDS-3 See DAT. and DDS-2 See DAT. formats.

Automation Considerations

While some of the newest tape drives are specifically designed to ease implementation into automated environments, virtually all tape formats may be found in automated products. Even though this is true, a customer should keep in mind that the duty cycle (1) A machine's rated capacity to continuously perform work under normal conditions. It generally applies to mechanical devices such as printers, in which case it would indicate the number of pages that can be printed per month without a problem.

(2) The ratio of a device operating versus cooling down. An 80% duty cycle means that it is capable of running 80% of a specified time period and turned off for the remainder.
 capabilities of tape drives differ significantly. Using a tape drive in an automated environment with too low of a duty cycle capability in an application will result in drive failures due to the drive literally "burning out".

The technical specifications of a tape drive indicate how high a duty cycle it will best operate in. The specifications that will assist you in matching the best drive for your application include MTBF MTBF - Mean Time Between Failure(s)
MTBF - Mean Time Before Failure
MTBF - Mid-Term Budget Framework (IMF/World Bank)
 (Mean Time Between Failure, hours), recording head life (hours), MSBF MSBF - Mean Swaps Between Failure
MSBF - Melbourne School Bands Festival (Australia)
MSBF - Michigan State Bar Foundation
 (Mean Swaps Between Failure, in cycles), and media durability (number of passes). The MTBF for tape drives for entry to mid-range automation applications are usually rated at a 20% duty cycle and range between 200,000 and 300,000 hours. Drives that are in this category include Travan NS and DDS. Drives capable of high duty cycle applications are usually rated at 100% duty cycle and around 250,000 or more hours for MTBF. Drives capable of medium to high duty cycle applications include DLT, SDLT, AIT, Mammoth, LTO Ultrium, 9840, and Magstar Magstar Cartridges
Magstar and Magstar MP are very different tape technologies. Magstar uses a half-inch, single-hub cartridge, while Magstar MP uses an 8mm cassette-style cartridge that starts in the middle for faster retrieval. Both use linear recording.


L490E Tape Library
This tape library from Overland Data reads and writes 3480, 3490 and 3490e cartridges.
.

Summary

The benefits of tape automation are plentiful--massive increases in available capacity, better data protection with automated backup procedures to eliminate operator errors and increased drive reliability through robotic media handling. Overland's leadership in tape automation is the result of the years of experience and innovation combined with matching the right tape technology for the right application.

Jim Jenkins is the director of product marketing at Overland Data, Inc. (San Diego, CA).
COPYRIGHT 2001 West World Productions, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Technology Information
Author:Jenkins, Jim
Publication:Computer Technology Review
Date:Jan 1, 2001
Words:621
Previous Article:Update On IP-based Storage.(Industry Trend or Event)
Next Article:Trends In RAID Technology.(Technology Information)
Topics:



Related Articles
PERSONAL YOU: Making Your Best Dance Video.(professional videographer shares his tips)
Two Decades Of Tape.(Industry Trend or Event)(Interview)
JMR Fortra Two Bay Drive Enclosure.(Product Information)
Tape Backup Still To Be Reckoned With.(Industry Trend or Event)
Fujifilm Ships First LTO Ultrium Product.(Product Announcement)
QUALSTAR CORP. ANNOUNCES 78 TERABYTE TAPE LIBRARY SHIPMENTS; TLS-412600 USES JUST FIVE SQUARE FEET OF FLOOR SPACE.(Product Announcement)
Points Of Light Sparkling In Low End Tape.(Industry Trend or Event)
Qualstar ships Quantum SDLT 320 drives in TLS-6000 tape libraries.
Disk vs. tape: disk will win over time. (Technology Arena Disk vs. Tape).
Tape or disk: why not both?(Storage Management)(Industry Overview)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles