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Old 09-15-2006, 12:04 AM
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How It Works: Hard Drives

(from www.PCWorld.com)

Ah, the wheel. Without it we wouldn't have cars--or hard drives. And the truth is, storage engineers love things that spin. Before the hard drive, magnetic tape on reels spun frantically on mainframe computers. Problem was, if the piece of data you wanted was at the end of the tape and you were at the beginning, you had to endure a seemingly interminable wait for an entire spool of tape to spin onto the take-up reel before you could get to the part you wanted.

By comparison, magnetic disk recording must have offered quite the epiphany. With magnetic disk recording, you can move the read/write head more-or-less directly to where the data is--allowing you random access and a much quicker process than waiting for a thousand feet of tape to spin under the read/write head.

Hard Drive Defined
A hard drive is a storage device that rapidly records and reads data represented by a collection of magnetized particles on spinning platters.

If a computer's CPU is the brain of the PC, the hard drive is its long-term memory--preserving data programs and your operating system even while the machine is asleep or off. Most people will never see the inside of a hard drive, hermetically shrouded as it is in its aluminum housing; but you may have noticed an exposed PC (printed circuit) board on the bottom.

This PC board is where the brains of a drive are found, including the I/O controller and firmware, embedded software that tells the hardware what to do and communicates with your PC. You'll also find the drive's buffer here. The buffer is a holding tank of memory for data that's waiting to be written or sent to your PC. As fast as a modern hard drive is, it's slow compared to the data flow its interface is capable of handling.

If you took apart a desktop hard drive, you'd typically see from one to four platters, each of which would be 3.5 inches in diameter. The diameter of the platters used in hard drives for mobile products vary from as little as 1 inch for drives that are used in music players and pocket hard drives to the 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch platters typically used in notebook hard drives. These platters, also known as disks, are coated on both sides with magnetically sensitive material, and stacked millimeters apart on a spindle. Also inside the drive is a motor that rotates the spindle and platters. The disks in hard drives used in notebooks spin at 4200, 5400, or 7200 revolutions per minute; desktop drives being manufactured these days spin their disks at 7200 or 10,000 rpm. Generally speaking, the faster the spin rate, the faster data can be read.
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Old 09-15-2006, 04:39 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

A hobby of mine is taking the little supermagnets out of hard drives. I get dead HDs from the local community college.

Got a big lump of VERY powerful magnets. The most powerful available to civilians.

http://www.7volts.com/magnets.htm


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Old 09-15-2006, 04:46 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

Fascinating X... when I think of all the HDs I've tossed over the years, i could have saved enough to scale metal structures like spiderman!
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Old 09-17-2006, 10:05 AM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

Just curious Xexon, why are you gathering up magnets? And I would be afraid that I would inadvertently erase something that I really need to keep. Also the timeline of around 20 minutes to get a magnet is somewhat labor intensive.

A sidenote - I remember when I got a new computer that had 20 MB hard drive and I thought that was so amazing.
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Old 09-17-2006, 03:28 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

These are not ordinary magnets.

The first time you handle them, you will be in awe of how something so tiny can be that strong. It kind of plays with your brain a little bit , but the first time you allow them to pinch up a blood blister, you'll learn to respect their power. I have several that cannot be pulled away from one another, you have to slide it off. All the time praying it doesn't flip around and nail you with another blood blister.

Well worth the effort to extract once you see what great playthings they are. I can get them out in about 10 minutes on average.

I've collected magnets for years, know all the precautions around electronics. Not a problem for me.


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Old 09-17-2006, 06:59 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

Quote:
Originally Posted by xexon View Post
A hobby of mine is taking the little supermagnets out of hard drives. I get dead HDs from the local community college.

Got a big lump of VERY powerful magnets. The most powerful available to civilians.

http://www.7volts.com/magnets.htm


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hmm interesting......
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Old 09-17-2006, 07:28 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neodymium_magnet



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Old 09-17-2006, 07:32 PM
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Re: How It Works: Hard Drives

A very interesting place.

http://unitednuclear.com/magnets.htm


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