IBM 726
The IBM 726 dual magnetic tape reader/recorder for the IBM 701 was announced on May 21, 1952. Unlike later IBM 7 track drives, the 726 could read backwards as well as forwards.
The tape had seven parallel tracks, six for data (called a copy group, not a character) and one to maintain parity. Tapes were recorded in odd parity, to ensure at least one bit transition per copy group as well as for error checking. [1]
The 726 concurrently handled two reels of tape, and there were two 726 units in an IBM 701 system. [2]
| Tracks | 6 Data, 1 parity | 
|---|---|
| Copy groups/inch | 100 copy groups/inch | 
| Tape speed | 75 Inches/sec | 
| Transfer rate | 7 500 copy groups/sec | 
| End of record gap | 1 Inch - 100 chars - 16.67 words | 
| Start time | 10 ms | 
| Stop time | 10 ms | 
| Width of tape | 1/2 inch | 
| Length of reel | 1 200 feet | 
| Composition | Cellulose acetate base | 
References
- ↑ Innovations in the Design of Magnetic Tape Subsystems (PDF)
- ↑ IBM 726 Magnetic tape reader/recorder
| 
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/15/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.