3M Data Cartridge (DC) 4.1.1 QIC-24 tape The QIC format was introduced by
3M in 1972. including: •
QIC-11: a four-track format giving 20 MB on a 450 ft DC300XL cartridge •
QIC-24: nine-track, 45 MB or 60 MB on a 450 or 600 ft DC600A cartridge, respectively •
QIC-120: 15-track, 125 MB, DC6150 cartridge •
QIC-525: 26-track, 525 MB on a 1020 ft DC6525 cartridge •
QIC-1350: 30-track, 1.35 GB on a DC9135 cartridge Other QIC DC standards include the
QIC-02 and
QIC-36 drive interface standards. Later QIC DC drives usually use the
QIC-104/111 SCSI and
QIC-121 SCSI-2 interfaces. Other Data Cartridge (DC) look-alikes: • 3M DC600HC, a preformatted tape with 16 tracks on 600 foot DC600A and software-based EOT/BOT detection. HP used these in the HP914x type of cartridge drives.
QIC Mini Cartridge (MC) Later, the smaller
Minicartridge (MC) form-factor was introduced. This is by size and is small enough to fit in a
drive bay. •
QIC-40 • 20-track DC2000 mini-cartridge 205 ft. 40 MB • 20-track DC2000XL mini-cartridge 307½ ft. 60 MB • 28-track DC2120 mini-cartridge 307½ ft. 120 MB
SLR SLR is
Tandberg Data's name for its line of high-capacity QIC data cartridge drives. As of 2005, Tandberg was the only manufacturer of SLR/QIC drives in the world. The largest SLR drive can hold 70 GB of data (140 GB compressed).
QIC-Wide A variant from
Sony using a wider .315 inch (8 mm) tape and increases the recording density. QIC-Wide drives are backwards compatible with QIC tapes.
QIC-EX QIC Extra, a modification to support longer tapes and thus more data by the
Verbatim Corporation, was made possible by making the cartridges physically longer to accommodate larger spools. In many cases a standard QIC drive and backup package can use the extended length to store additional data, however in some cases an attempt to reformat a QIC-EX cartridge fails since the time taken to traverse the extra length triggers a timeout in the drive or controlling software intended to detect a broken tape. == Computer interfaces ==