The tape for the Burroughs 220 drives was not metallic. It was 3/4-inch wide, 
and I think a Mylar sandwich. It could be spliced much the same way you would 
have spliced quarter-inch reel-to-reel audio tape back in the day.

If the tape controller detected a parity error, it would backspace the block 
and retry twice. If the error persisted on the second retry, the tape would 
stop with the head ready to read the bad block (hanging the processor in the 
middle of its I/O instruction), and the operator would have to take manual 
action. If the drive punched a hole in the tape, then the drive needed service 
-- probably a bad capstan pinch-roller solenoid.

Reply via email to