One of those magnetic fluid tape checking devices would show the bits very 
easily at that density (or even a lot higher).  

It seems to me this sort of thing should be no problem at all for the various 
general purpose tape reading machines that have been built, especially the ones 
with MR heads.  So long as the reader has heads that land reasonably well on 
the recorded tracks, the rest is just software.

Part of the software work would be reverse engineering the recording format -- 
NRZ or NRZI or whatever, bit layout and character set encoding, file encoding.  
The encoding of formatting control information will probably be guesswork, but 
recovering most of the plain text should be doable.

        paul

> On Jul 29, 2021, at 4:58 AM, Dave Wade G4UGM via cctalk 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Cory,
> 
> Its only recorded at around 25BPI so I don't thing it would be too hard to 
> decode.
> Given its a character at a time, I suspect some iron filings or similar would 
> reveal the codes and track spacing and with a bit of luck you could find a 
> head that would read the data...
> I am sure we used to have some when we had real tapes.
> 
> Dave
> 
> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: cctalk <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Cory
>> Heisterkamp via cctalk
>> Sent: 29 July 2021 00:37
>> To: General Discussion: On-Topic Posts <[email protected]>
>> Subject: Reading MT/ST Tapes
>> 
>> This is a bit of a long shot, but is anyone aware of a successful method to 
>> read
>> IBM Selectric MT/ST tapes? A museum in Australia has a box of them and are
>> interested in the contents.
>> 
>> I'm fairly involved in the global Selectric community and while 1 or 2 
>> MT/ST’s
>> exist, they’re non-functional. I know IBM offered a 2495 Tape Reader for the
>> IBM 360, which could be a starting point with modification, but I suspect
>> those are even scarcer than the MT/ST itself.
>> 
>> Even the encoding format appears to be a bit of a secret. Recording is
>> character-by-character, tape spacing controlled by sprocket holes along one
>> edge.
>> 
>> https://obsoletemedia.org/ibm-mtst/ <https://obsoletemedia.org/ibm-
>> mtst/?fbclid=IwAR28c5ej69AlF0os1PcykpHCh0Q_yz5BXbnUSi9UID-
>> 4pY6GU3wLxZXFhDI>
>> 
>> Thanks- Cory
> 

Reply via email to