From: Paul Koning Sent: Tuesday, October 13, 2015 7:55 AM >> On Oct 12, 2015, at 9:16 PM, Rich Alderson <ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org>> >> wrote:
>> ... >> The M tracks are longitudinally encoded (6-bit values chosen such that >> they read the same as NRZ backwards and forwards for DECtape, 4-bit >> values for LINCtape) to predefine blocks (cf. disk sectors) for data. > More precisely: it's Manchester encoding, not NRZ. The result is that > mark track codes are complemented and reversed end for end if you read > them in the opposite order. OK, what I had readily to hand was the TC02 DECtape Control maintenance manual (from the PDP-9 series, DEC-09-I3CD-D), where page 2-3 states: Data is recorded by the Manchester method in which a prerecorded timing track synchronizes read/write operations. When writing on the tape, the write amplifiers supply the maximum current in either one direction or the other (non-return to zero, NRZ). So yes, you're correct to observe that NRZ is not as important as Manchester in a description of *reading* the data. Thank you for the correction. Rich Rich Alderson Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer Living Computer Museum 2245 1st Avenue S Seattle, WA 98134 mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/