Contents
Introduction
I found myself with more data than I could reliably and cost effectively back up on Blu-Rays.
Instead of putting more money into HDD, I decided to invest in a tape drive.
Here are some of my impressions and possibly some useful information for you.
Hardware
I purchased an HP Ultrium 30750, which is the LTO 8 variant of HP's Ultrium line.
I also needed a PCIe card to connect the SAS3 connection. For this you need an HBA (Host Bus Adapter) card. You basically need to make sure the hardware connections are correct and that it is based on the Broadcom/LSI architecture. Both the Ultrium and the HBA are "Mini SAS 26pin (SFF-8088)"
This one has worked well Amazon Link to HBA
This cord has worked well also Amazon Link to SAS3 Cable
I purchase tapes from multiple vendors, haven't had any issues so far.
Software
There are two main camps of people using tapes to archive data. Those that use LTFS and those that do not.
LTFS allows the tape to appear as a filesystem like any other removable media. With the filesystem, you lose storage capacity. I get 11TB with my LTFS formatted cartridges.
Raw tape storage stores files in a tar (tape archive) for each file you archive.
At how cheap these tapes are, I'm not worried about losing a TB of
