Jump to content

Scalable Linear Recording

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by 94.219.88.133 (talk) at 13:58, 30 December 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Scalable Linear Recording is the name used by Tandberg Data for its line of QIC based tape drives.

The earliest SLR drive, the SLR1, has a capacity of 250 MB, while the latest drive, the SLR140, has a capacity of 70 GB. The term SLR is often used to refer to QIC tapes, as for many years they were the only drives that used them before Tandberg discontinued production around 2015.

Generations

[edit]

Quarter inch formats

[edit]
Generation SLR1 SLR2 SLR3 SLR4 SLR4-DC SLR5 SLR24
SLR6
SLR32
MLR1
SLR50
MLR3
Release Date 1986 1988 1990 1992 1997 1996 1997
Data Capacity 250 MB 525 MB 1 GB 2.5 GB 4 GB 12 GB 16 GB 20 GB
Transfer Rate (kB/s) 84.8 199 197 296 280 387 1200 1500 2000
Tape Length (m) 311 457 457 462

NOTE: MLR stands for Multi-channel Linear Recording.

Eight millimeter formats

[edit]
Generation SLR7 SLR40 SLR60 SLR75 SLR100 SLR140 SLR200 SLR400
Release Date 1997 2003 TBA TBA
Data Capacity 20 GB 20 GB 30 GB 38 GB 50 GB 70 GB 100 GB 200 GB
Transfer Rate (kB/s) 3000 2500 4000 4300 5000 6000 16000 32000
Tape Length (m) 470.9 187.5 278.9 350.5 457.2 505.9
[edit]