@Nine hey, they're chrome tapes, so they're not bottom-of-the-line ones! (there were four different formulations; type 1 or ferric was the cheapest, then type 2 or chrome was better quality, type 3 or ferro-chrome was not really much better than type 2 and was pretty short-lived, and then type 4 or metal was most expensive and highest quality)

@Felthry @Nine Ferric implies iron though, so how are those not metal?
(Heck, chrome too?)

@BatElite @Nine Ferric uses ferric oxide as the magnetic material--basically rust. chrome tapes are also a chromium compound (metallic chromium is actually completely useless for magnetic recording, but some of its compounds have good magnetic properties)

@Felthry @BatElite I take it the type 4 "metal" tapes use a different compound than chromium for better, more hard wearing tape and more accurate (and less prone to degradation over time and copying) recording?

@Nine @BatElite The metal tapes use actual metal powder or foil; I'm not sure what specifically but I would assume some type of iron alloy, possibly with some cobalt added

they'd want to prevent rust, but it won't be normal stainless steel because that has poor magnetic properties (you may have noticed that magnets don't stick to stainless steel silverware)

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