Skip to main content

Inside a Hard Disk

The best way to understand how a hard disk works is to take a look inside. (Note that OPENING A HARD DISK RUINS IT, so this is not something to try at home unless you have a defunct drive)

Here is a typical hard-disk drive:
It is a sealed aluminum box with controller electronics attached to one side.The electronics control the read/write mechanism and the motor that spins the platters. The electronics also assemble the magnetic domains on the drive into bytes (reading) and turn bytes into magnetic domains (writing). The electronics are all contained on a small board that detaches from the rest of the drive:


Underneath the board are the connections for the motor that spins the platters, as well as a highly-filtered vent hole that lets internal and external air pressures equalize:

Removing the cover from the drive reveals an extremely simple but very precise interior:


In this picture you can see:

  • The platters, which typically spin at 3,600 or 7,200 rpm when the drive is operating. These platters are manufactured to amazing tolerances and are mirror-smooth (as you can see in this interesting self-portrait of the author... no easy way to avoid that!).

  • The arm that holds the read/write heads is controlled by the mechanism in the upper-left corner, and is able to move the heads from the hub to the edge of the drive. The arm and its movement mechanism are extremely light and fast. The arm on a typical hard-disk drive can move from hub to edge and back up to 50 times per second -- it is an amazing thing to watch!
In order to increase the amount of information the drive can store, most hard disks have multiple platters. This drive has three platters and six read/write heads:



The mechanism that moves the arms on a hard disk has to be incredibly fast and precise. It can be constructed using a high-speed linear motor.

Many drives use a "voice coil" approach -- the same technique used to move the cone of a speaker on your stereo is used to move the arm.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Wired Equivalent Privacy

Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) is a security used in IEEE 802.11 wireless networks introduced in year Sep 1999, it was available on Router Configuration In WEP there are 2 Formats Hexadecimal ASCII

Installing A Printer

Go to Control Panel Click Printer Option Click Add a Printer Click Add Local Printer Select Port Select The Printer & click Next Click Next Installation Wizard Appears Now The Printer is Successfully Installed You can see your installed Printer icon in printer wizard in control panel

Intel Microprocessor History

List of the Microprocessors from Intel family from beggining Intel 4004 - 4 bit processors Intel 4040 Intel 8008 - 8 bit processors Intel 8080 Intel 8085 Intel 8048 - Microcontrollers Intel 8051 Intel 80151 Intel 80251 MCS 96 Family 3000 Familytect Intel 8086 - 16 bit Processors Intel 8088 Intel 80186 Intel 80188 Intel 80286 iAPX 432 - 32 bit Processors, non-x86 i960 aka 80960 i860 aka 80860 Xscale 80386DX - 32 bit processors 80386SX 80376 80386SL 80386EX 80486DX 80486SX 80486DX2 80486SL 80486DX4 Original Pentium - P5 micro-architecture Pentium with MMX Technology Pentium Pro - P6 / pentium M micro-architecture Pentium II Celeron (Pentium II-based) Pentium III Pentium II and III Xeon Celeron (Pentium III Coppermine-based) Celeron (Pentium III Tualatin-based) Pentium M Celeron M Intel Core Dual-Core Xeon LV Pentium 4 - NetBurst microarchitecture Xeon Mobile Pentium 4-M Pentium 4 EE Pentium 4E Pentium 4F Itanium - 64-bi...