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- In article <132326@cup.portal.com>, Jeric@cup.portal.com (J Eric Chard) says:
-
- > But, there I was reading a PC (sigh/yuck) mag, trying to become
- >aculturated to that disgusting cult, and lo, here's some Exabyte brand tape
- >drives for like ~=$270.
-
- Exabyte is the company, not the drive.
-
- > Now, I >>know<< that the Exabyte used in video was going for around
- >$ two grand, so my assumption is that these are a different format. The mystic
- >phrase "QIC-320" rings a bell.
-
- QIC = quarter inch cartridge, I believe, and there are several kinds,
- as indicated by that trailing number.
-
- > The question is: What is the format name of the Exabyte drives that
- >are used in post houses?
-
- Most use the Exabyte 8200, the slightly older, uncompressed, 2 gig per
- 8mm tape. Some have the newer 8500, although it can read/write the older
- 2 gig format, many Unix boxes don't give an easy way to soft-configure
- the driver to handle both tape formats. So if someone writes an 8500 tape
- for you, you might not be able to read it in your 8200. Now there's the
- 8505, a slightly cheaper version of the 8500, I believe because it does
- software compression instead of hardware compression.
-
- > Q2: What prices are they currently going for?
-
- Greater than $1500 each, depending on model, although you occasionally
- see the Exabyte 8mm drives for sale on the net, as parts from other systems
- that used them for backup.
-
- I've got an 8500 here, and I love it. I use it to back up the Amiga,
- the WinNT machine, the SGI, the Mac, everything, using various drivers.
- It's fast and the tapes are cheap ~$8 each.
-
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