Lateral Vibration and Read/Write Head Servo Dynamics in Magnetic Tape Transport

Thumbnail Image
Date
2010-01-01
Authors
Brake, M.
Wickert, Jonathan
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Authors
Person
Wickert, Jonathan
Senior Vice President And Provost
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Organizational Unit
Mechanical Engineering
The Department of Mechanical Engineering at Iowa State University is where innovation thrives and the impossible is made possible. This is where your passion for problem-solving and hands-on learning can make a real difference in our world. Whether you’re helping improve the environment, creating safer automobiles, or advancing medical technologies, and athletic performance, the Department of Mechanical Engineering gives you the tools and talent to blaze your own trail to an amazing career.
Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Department
Mechanical Engineering
Abstract

Magnetic tape is a flexible mechanical structure having dimensions that areorders of magnitude different in its thickness, width, and length directions. In order to position the tape relative to the read/write head, guides constrain the tape's lateral motion, but even the modest forces that develop during guiding can cause wear and damage to the tape's edges. This paper presents antensioned axially-moving viscoelastic Euler–Bernoulli beam model used to simulate thentape's lateral dynamics, the guiding forces, and the position errornbetween the data tracks and the read/write head. Lateral vibration can be excited by disturbances in the form of pack runout, flange impacts, precurvature of the tape in its natural unstressed state, and spiral stacking as tape winds onto the take-up pack. The guide model incorporates nonlinear characteristics including preload and deadbands in displacement and restoring force. A tracking servo model represents the ability of the read/write head's actuator to track disturbances in the tape's motion, and the actuator's motion couples through friction with the tape's vibration. Low frequency excitation arising from pack runout can excite high frequency position error because of the nonlinear characteristics of the guides and impacts against the pack's flanges. The contact force developed between the tape and the packs' flanges can be minimized without significantly increasing the position error by judicious selection of the flanges' taper angle.

Comments

This article is from Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement and Control 132, no. 1 (January 2010): 011012, doi:10.1115/1.4000665.

Description
Keywords
Citation
DOI
Subject Categories
Copyright
Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2010
Collections