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Date:      Wed, 5 Nov 1997 06:50:29 -0800
From:      Josef Grosch <jgrosch@superior.mooseriver.com>
To:        Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
Cc:        hardware@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Seagate 24GB DAT drive
Message-ID:  <19971105065029.36729@mooseriver.com>
In-Reply-To: <199711051005.KAA00479@hawk.gnome.co.uk>; from Chris Stenton on Wed, Nov 05, 1997 at 10:05:52AM %2B0000
References:  <199711051005.KAA00479@hawk.gnome.co.uk>

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On Wed, Nov 05, 1997 at 10:05:52AM +0000, Chris Stenton wrote:
> 
> I have just got hold of a Seagate 24GB DAT drive and have come across an
> interesting problem in that it works fine for blank tapes and can read tapes
> produced on my old HP DAT but I can't  write onto any of these old tapes. 
> Even mt erase does not work. It seems that if there is data on the tape it 
> looks for a special marker at the beginning of the tape; if it does not 
> find it it gives a media error. Is this a problem with all Seagate DAT 
> drives or just the 24GB version?
> 
> 


I have bumped into a simular problem with my HP 4GB DAT drive. It would
just refuse to write to some old tapes even after I ran these tapes though
a bulk erasure. I could not find a rhyme or reason for this. My solution
was to write a few end-of-tape marks at the beginning of the tape. Like so:

    mt -f /dev/rst0 weof 5

I do not totally understand why this should work but a little cargo cult
never hurt anyone ;-)


Josef

-- 
Josef Grosch           | Another day closer to a |    FreeBSD 2.2.5
jgrosch@MooseRiver.com |   Micro$oft free world  | UNIX for the masses




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