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Date:      Tue, 10 Feb 1998 18:00:42 -0600
From:      David Kelly <dkelly@hiwaay.net>
To:        Jamie Clark <jamie@erinet.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hardware@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Q: Opinions on which Tape Drive to Buy? 
Message-ID:  <199802110000.SAA04969@nospam.hiwaay.net>
In-Reply-To: Message from Jamie Clark <jamie@erinet.com>  of "Mon, 09 Feb 1998 23:03:54 EST." <34DFD1A9.E84F411@erinet.com> 

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> David Kelly wrote:
> 
> > http://www.basoncomputer.com was advertising an Archive 4326 for $399.
> > Not sure if that price was updated on their web page or not.
> 
> It's listed as a Conner 4326 for $399.  Is DDS-2?  I can't find out any
> product specifications via the net.  The Conner site is seagate and the only
> tape drives they offer info on is the retail.  None of the Conner line is
> available.  I'm wandering about compatible SCSI cards, software to drive it
> in Windoze 95, is one tape included, the which 3M tape do I buy, error rate,
> MTBF

Alright, a black mark for Seagate. The data was there a couple of 
months ago.

The Seagate/Conner/Archive 4326 is a DDS-1/DDS-2 drive including 
compression. If 2G is enough, then 90M DDS-1 tapes at $7 or so work 
perfectly fine. If your data compresses then you might get 4G on that 
tape. The 120M DDS-2 tapes cost about twice the DDS-1 tape. Read/Write 
speeds are the same, about 400k/sec uncompressed, 800k/sec if 
compression works for you.

The STD28000N is a newer version with more RAM and faster data rates.
The 4326 may have a sticker aluding to that fact. STD28000N's I've seen
have a sticker mentioning its a replacement for the 4326. I think there
are 3 generations of this unit, the 4326, the Conner/Seagate 8000, then
the current 28000. Don't confuse the 8000 with the Travan 8000.
Seagate's site once had details on how to tell Archive/Conner/Seagate
tape generations from the front. There are 3 grooves on the bezel. It
all depends on what groove the LED's and eject button are on. Mine are in
the bottom groove. I also have an external 2G with LED and buttons in
the middle groove, and another in the bottom. The 2G in the bottom only 
does 170k/sec while the 2G in the middle does 400k/sec, as does my 4326 
with eject in the bottom groove.

As always, before buying verify with the vendor that the device is what 
you think it is. The drive from Bason may be refurbished. In any case 
iron out the warranty in advance.

Also make sure you know what form factor it comes in. The 4326RP is a 
3.5" drive in 5-1/4" rails with a 5-1/4" face plate. That's what I have.
External models of this drive come in a very nice enclosure from the 
factory. Much nicer than the aftermarket enclosures.

--
David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@nospam.hiwaay.net
=====================================================================
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.



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