dual-track tape - определение. Что такое dual-track tape
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Что (кто) такое dual-track tape - определение

MAGNETIC TAPE FORMAT INTRODUCED BY IBM IN 1952
IBM 7 Track; 7-track tape; 7 track tape; IBM 7 track
  • A reel of half-inch magnetic tape being loaded onto an [[IBM 729]] tape drive that is attached to an [[IBM 1401]] being restored at the [[Computer History Museum]].

8-track tape         
  • center console]] and dash
  • Factory installed AM/FM radio/8-track unit in a 1978 [[AMC Matador]] with a ''[[Briefcase Full of Blues]]'' cartridge in "play" position
  • Billboard]]'' July 16, 1966
  • A blank 8-track cartridge
  • Blank cartridges could be used to make recordings at home.
MAGNETIC TAPE SOUND RECORDING TECHNOLOGY
8-Track cartridge; 8-Track tape; Eight track player; 8-track cassette; Eight track cartridges; 8 track tape; 8-track cartridges; Quad 8; Lear Jet Stereo 8; Learjet Stereo 8; Eight-track player; 8-track player; 8 track player; 8 track cartridge; 8-Track Cartridge; 8 Track Cartridge; Stereo 8; 8-track cartridge; Quad-8; Eight track tape; Eight-track tape; Eight track cassettes
The 8-track tape (formally Stereo 8; commonly called eight-track cartridge, eight-track tape, and eight-track) is a magnetic tape sound recording technology that was popular from the mid-1960s to the early 1980s, when the compact cassette, which pre-dated the 8-track system, surpassed it in popularity for pre-recorded music.
tape recorder         
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  • EMI BTR2 machines in a BBC recording room, 12 November 1961.
  • Marconi-Stille steel tape recorder at BBC studios, London, 1937
  • thumb
  • thumb
  • thumb
  • Size comparison of Elcaset (left) with standard Compact Cassette
  • This tape recorder of Dr. Goodale is exhibited in the private Phonograph Museum in Mariazell, Austria.
  • WDR]] radio archive with a broadcast tape from 1990. This is a centre hub with only a very short length of tape wound round it.
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  • Solidyne GMS200 tape recorder with computer self-adjustment. Argentina 1980–1990
  • Otari MX-80 24-track with 2-inch reels
  • Size comparison of RCA tape cartridge (right) with the more common Compact Cassette
  • A typical portable desktop cassette recorder from [[RadioShack]].
  • [[Compact cassette]]
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  • Early model Studer professional tape recorder, 1969
  • Tape deck in operation
  • Editing magnetic tape
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  • Magnetic wire recorder, invented by [[Valdemar Poulsen]], 1898. It is exhibited at [[Brede works]] Industrial Museum, Lyngby, Denmark.
  • Magnetophon from a German radio station in World War II
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MACHINE FOR RECORDING SOUND
Audio tape; Magnetic tape recorder; Tape deck; Audiotape; Tape recorders; Tape machine; Audio tapes; Magnetic tape recording; Tape player; Tape recording; Audio-tape; Tapedeck speeds; Magnetic-tape sound recording; Magnetic audiotape; Dual-track tape recorder; Tape-recorder; Audio tape recorder; Magnetic tape player; Magnetic tape deck; Magnetic tape machine; Magnetic tape sound recording
n.
1) to start; turn on a tape recorder
2) to operate, play a tape recorder
3) to stop; turn off a tape recorder
4) a cassette; reel-to-reel tape recorder
audiotape         
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  • EMI BTR2 machines in a BBC recording room, 12 November 1961.
  • Marconi-Stille steel tape recorder at BBC studios, London, 1937
  • thumb
  • thumb
  • thumb
  • Size comparison of Elcaset (left) with standard Compact Cassette
  • This tape recorder of Dr. Goodale is exhibited in the private Phonograph Museum in Mariazell, Austria.
  • WDR]] radio archive with a broadcast tape from 1990. This is a centre hub with only a very short length of tape wound round it.
  • thumb
  • Solidyne GMS200 tape recorder with computer self-adjustment. Argentina 1980–1990
  • Otari MX-80 24-track with 2-inch reels
  • Size comparison of RCA tape cartridge (right) with the more common Compact Cassette
  • A typical portable desktop cassette recorder from [[RadioShack]].
  • [[Compact cassette]]
  • thumb
  • Early model Studer professional tape recorder, 1969
  • Tape deck in operation
  • Editing magnetic tape
  • thumb
  • Magnetic wire recorder, invented by [[Valdemar Poulsen]], 1898. It is exhibited at [[Brede works]] Industrial Museum, Lyngby, Denmark.
  • Magnetophon from a German radio station in World War II
  • thumb
MACHINE FOR RECORDING SOUND
Audio tape; Magnetic tape recorder; Tape deck; Audiotape; Tape recorders; Tape machine; Audio tapes; Magnetic tape recording; Tape player; Tape recording; Audio-tape; Tapedeck speeds; Magnetic-tape sound recording; Magnetic audiotape; Dual-track tape recorder; Tape-recorder; Audio tape recorder; Magnetic tape player; Magnetic tape deck; Magnetic tape machine; Magnetic tape sound recording
(audiotapes, audiotaping audiotaped)
1.
Audiotape is magnetic tape which is used to record sound.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
An audiotape is a recording of speech, music, or other sounds on magnetic tape. (AM; in BRIT, usually use cassette
)
N-COUNT
3.
If you audiotape speech, music, or other sounds, you record them on magnetic tape. (AM; in BRIT, usually use tape
)
We always audiotape these interviews.
VERB: V n

Википедия

IBM 7-track

IBM's first magnetic-tape data storage devices, introduced in 1952, use what is now generally known as 7-track tape. The magnetic tape is 12 inch (12.7 mm) wide, and there are six data tracks plus one parity track for a total of seven parallel tracks that span the length of the tape. Data is stored as six-bit characters, with each bit of the character and the additional parity bit stored in a different track.

These tape drives were mechanically sophisticated floor-standing drives that used vacuum columns to buffer long U-shaped loops of tape. Between active control of powerful reel motors and vacuum control of these U-shaped tape loops, extremely rapid start and stop of the tape at the tape-to-head interface could be achieved. When active, the two tape reels thus fed tape into or pulled tape out of the vacuum columns, intermittently spinning in rapid, unsynchronized bursts resulting in visually striking action. Stock shots of such vacuum-column tape drives in motion were widely used to represent "the computer" in films and television.