Hi:

The following answer comes from a retired IBM tape technologist:

The color of the coatings on a tape are dominated by the magnetic pigment (or 
the carbon used in back coats..which is black)..the earliest iron oxide 
coatings were based on the conversion of alpha-iron oxide which is a pale 
yellow and some what needle shaped (longer than wide) but non-magnetic to gamma 
iron oxide which is magnetic. The very early particles were not very 
homogeneous and were very highly aggregated....poor conversion as the early 
particle were being produced by paint pigment manufactures as a specialty 
product in low volume. These were a yellow brown color..but by the 60's  gamma 
iron oxide of 250-300 Oe was commonly used in the magnetic layer coatings. 
These were typically brown to chocolate brown  (if they had some carbon black 
mixed in for surface conductivity (anti-static) which depending on the use as 
well as the manufacturer varied a lot i n surface finish (gloss) as well). This 
market was driven by audio primarily and dynamic range and analogue signal 
characteristics such wow & flutter were driving formulation and magnetic 
particle development. 

In the late 60-s and 70's new particles began to enter the market..Cobalt doped 
and later cobalt 'modified"  gamma iron oxide as well as chromium dioxide..and 
some very early explorations of iron metal particles and some exotic mixed 
metal crystals... The colors of the magnetic coatings based on more acicular 
gamma iron oxide made specifically for the recording market were now reddish 
brown , cobalt doped were a dark brown - to black, chromium dioxide is very 
black..remember during this period digital recording in both tapes and disks 
were now the growth areas driving new pigment development and drastically 
improved formulations driven by the need for improved durability, longevity and 
wear characteristics (drop outs (defects & debris), head wear and head/drive 
contamination being increasingly problematic)..in the 90's metal particle and 
BaFe pigments took over tape while disks moved to thin film magnetic layers.

As for reel materials and hub evolution..the initial reels were metal and 
expensive...plastic became normal in the 60's and beyond for the most part..but 
for master copies or sensitive archival reels..glass or metal were preferred... 
but changes in the  materials were driven by the higher tape speeds,tensions 
and demands for improved reliability and durability. Hubs in some drives  had 
to be conductive so had carbon black or metals added to them to improve the 
compressive strength and conductivity.  A lot of very innovative but subtle 
design features moved into tape reels/hubs specifically designed for various 
transports and industry demands. In addition lubrication and binder changes 
were common as the needs for the various products in audio, video and digital 
recording  advanced. 

Hope this helps..but if the interest is primarily in getting a useful detailed 
knowledge of a particular tape..color is pretty much useless..you need SEM/EDAX 
and GC/MS and a database of tape analyses to compare to in order to really 
begin..and then to really know the tape you need DMA/DMTA mechanical analysis, 
and AFM/MFM surface profiles.....but to my knowledge only IBM had that data and 
I imagine it ..like so much of that knowledge learned from 1962-2008 is now 
gone.

Tom

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Guzis [mailto:ccl...@sydex.com] 
Sent: Monday, November 20, 2017 10:35 PM
To: CCtalk
Subject: Idle question: Color of tape coatings

 

While working on some old (again!) half-inch tapes, I note that some of the 
very old ones have an oxide coating about the color of milk

chocolate.   Newer ones are anywhere from dark chocolate to black.

 

Reel construction is another aspect.  The really old ones tend to be all clear 
plastic, including the hub area.  Newer ones have either a black plastic 
reinforcement to the hub or employ an aluminum sleeve.

 

In most cases, the oldest of these is from around 1964, but probably older than 
that, as the only clues I have are dates placed by the tape librarian when a 
tape is put back into the pool or a label indicating when the tape was last 
recertified.

 

Was there a date after which *all* half-inch tape became the dark brown to 
nearly black in color?

 

--Chuck

 

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