Hard drive are high tech

blakerwry

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Oct 12, 2002
Messages
4,203
Location
Kansas City, USA
Website
justblake.com
I was just reading through some hitachi hdd data. They compare the distance between a hdd platters and it's reading heads to various other objects....

They give an example of an Jet airliner having to fly 1 inch above the surface of the Earth.


This exerpt shows that a mere finger print smudge is some 200 times taller than the distance between the hdd head and disk surface.

hitachi.gif
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Jan 25, 2002
Messages
4,254
Location
Flushing, New York
The jet airliner analogy is wrong. Consider that a hard drive head is moving at about 80 mph relative to the platter when on the outer rim of a 7200 RPM hard disk, and is "flying" at a height of perhaps 1 um. A more accurate analogy would be an airliner flying at 7 um, or 0.00028", since the airliner moves about 7 times as fast as the hard drive platter. Or put another way, if you were to scale up the head to the size of an airliner, then it would be indeed be flying at a height of about 1 inch, but at a speed of 3,000,000 mph! So either way, the analogy is wrong.

In any case, this just goes to show what an incredible piece of engineering a modern hard drive is, all the more so when you consider their low price and high reliability.
 

time

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Jan 18, 2002
Messages
4,932
Location
Brisbane, Oz
I like the idea that a single bacterium could cause a head crash. :eek:

Actually, if we translate the head distance to ceiling height in our world, the bacterium would be as big as a 10 to 200 storey building. :eek4:
 

Tannin

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Jan 15, 2002
Messages
4,448
Location
Huon Valley, Tasmania
Website
www.redhill.net.au
Good post, Blake. Thankyou. Time we brought ourselves up to date from the hoary old comparisons that we used to read in ST-225 days.

Time, one wonders if a virus might be a more appropriate cause. :) With that in mind:

Head gap: 40nm
Large virus: 250nm
Small virus: 20nm
Maximum resolution of an electron microscope: 2nm
Maximum resolution of an optical microscope: 500nm
 

blakerwry

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Oct 12, 2002
Messages
4,203
Location
Kansas City, USA
Website
justblake.com
time said:
I like the idea that a single bacterium could cause a head crash. :eek:

Actually, I kind of like to imagine that the bacterium would take a spin on platters and jump the head as it comes by. ...kinda like jump rope.


... from the reference point of the platters, the head does come by.... 7200 times a second on my drives. -That a fast jumping bacteria
 

Handruin

Administrator
Joined
Jan 13, 2002
Messages
13,790
Location
USA
I was going to say the same thing...that's one hella fast drive...432,000 RPM's is amazing! The wine from that motor must drive all the dogs crazy in your neighborhood.
 
Top