Re: Tech question: restoration of flood-damaged magnetic media

From: Brian D Williams (talon57@well.com)
Date: Wed Apr 05 2000 - 11:34:42 MDT


From: "Michael S. Lorrey" <mike@datamann.com>

>Keep in mind that if his 'life's work' was on tapes that had been
>written years ago, on tapes that are a few decades old, there is
>a distinct chance of losing a good chunk of data in many places.
>Some tapes of the older and lower quality types (esp dealing with
>9 track), are extremely hard to recover data off of after
>storage for many years even under the best of conditions. I'm
>experienced dealing with poor quality tapes, some of which are
>older than I am, and its no picnic. If the winding of the tape
>loosened at all, water would have seeped in between the tape
>material rather easily.

>It can be done, but it is expensive.

Mike's point is a good one. Any magnetically recorded item starts
to degrade almost from the moment it's created and will need to be
re-recorded periodically depending on the levels it was recorded at
(key word hysteresis). Some formats are more notorious for this
than others. A box of even regular 3.5 floppys kept under perfect
conditions will degrade to useless over time. I forget the
technical name for this.

Contacting the tapes manufacturer should provide appropriate data
on this.

Brian

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