DAT
Derived from the SONY Audio DAT recorder and a joint HP/SONY recording format, DDS, DAT has rapidly become the most popular medium for tape backup. Companies such as Hewlett-Packard have also put great effort into the development of the 4mm DAT drive and are continuing to do so.
This format is high capacity with good performance combined with drives and tapes which are of relatively low cost. The recording method used is helical scan. Data tracks are recorded diagonally across the width of the tape.
At Ontrack, we have developed hardware to cope with a vast array of problems from human error to hardware failure.
Overwrite
The data that has been overwritten is lost, but all older data from further along the tape will be recovered.
Media failure
We can move past any damage and recover the data that we find. The recording is made in one direction only and so the damage is never revisited.
Mis-track
Ontrack has developed sophisticated equipment to allow the rapid adjustment for tracking problems with tapes.
System area damage
If the system areas at the beginning of a tape are damaged then the tape will appear to be blank. Your data will still be there and Ontrack will recover it.
Exabyte
Derived from the Sony Camcorder mechanism, but with improved data integrity, Exabyte's 8mm backup device became prominent in the 1980's as a high capacity backup device for DEC VAX systems.
Exabyte have continued to enhance the mechanism and improve the recording technique as the drive became popular for high end networks and UNIX systems. The latest drive, the Mammoth, is capable of recording up to 40 gigabytes of data at extremely high speed. The recording method used is helical scan. Data tracks are recorded diagonally across the width of the tape.
Ontrack has developed hardware to cope with a vast array of problems with Exabyte tapes, from human error to hardware failure.
Overwrite
The data that has been overwritten is unfortunately lost, but all older data from further along the tape will be recovered.
Media failure
We can move past any damage and recover the data that we find. The recording is made in one direction only and so the damaged section is never revisited.
Mis-track
Ontrack has developed sophisticated equipment to allow the rapid adjustment for tracking problems with tapes.
System area damage
If the system areas at the beginning of a tape are damaged then the tape will appear to be blank. Your data will still be there and Ontrack will recover it.
Quarter inch cartridge (QIC)
Quarter inch cartridge is a well established recording medium which predominated in the UNIX/PC environment prior to the advent of 4mm DAT. It also found favour with IBM as a main backup option for the first AS/400 mid-range systems.
The only current manufacturer of these drives is Tandberg Data. There are still many drives in use from other manufacturers such as Archive, Wangtek and Sankyo. The recording method used is serpentine. Data tracks are recorded alternately forwards and then in reverse.
Overwrite
We can recover all data that has not actually been overwritten. The complication with QIC is that a full width erase bar is energised during the recording of the first track. This is to ensure that the drive is writing to blank tape and thus avoid any problems with earlier data. It does mean that once a whole track has been written, the remainder of the tape has been erased.
Media flaw
Ontrack can recover all of the data beyond a media flaw, even though your backup software refuses to read any further. If the problem is restricted to the current track then the remainder of the data will be recovered intact.
Tracking
Ontrack can recover data even after a serious drive failure. At Ontrack we have even recovered data written by a drive where the recording heads had almost fallen off.