I think they are _supposed to_ write at the higher capacity without a relabel if it's writing from the beginning of the cartridge (after the label, of course).
When I upgraded my -J1A drives to -E05, I didn't do anything to my -JA tapes once they were scratch to start getting the higher capacity (and it seems like I'd have noticed otherwise). The 3590 drives worked the same way. So I'd expect the same for -E05 to -E06 or -E07. It's also probably noted in some TS1130 or TS1140 marketing material and/or techincal manual, as well. In my case, since all the tapes moving to the new 3584 libraries were already scratch, it was easy enough to go ahead and relabel them, too. As a bonus, it satisfied any paranoia about it _not_ working, as well as a first pass at ensuring the new drives liked the old tapes, at least at first glance. The exception was the 8 months of NDMP tapes I had to hang onto, which included both -JA and -JB tapes, which I just moved. As they expire, I'll relabel -- out of paranoia -- the -JB tapes, and when they're all expired, I'll eject the -JA tapes for disposal. =Dave Zoltan Forray wrote: > > I think you have to relabel to get the higher density/ capacity. Folks > usually setup their libraries to auto-relabel if there is an error reading > the label. > > On Feb 28, 2013 8:35 PM, "Prather, Wanda" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Looking at this myself for a customer. > > Just to confirm, > > when you reclaim a JB cartridge that was written by an E05, let it go > > scratch, then write it from the beginning on an E06 drive, you get it > > written at higher density but you do NOT have to relabel the cartridge, > > correct? > > -- Hello World. David Bronder - Systems Architect Segmentation Fault ITS-EI, Univ. of Iowa Core dumped, disk trashed, quota filled, soda warm. [email protected]
