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  1. #1
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    Aug 2003
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    Hard Drive Abuse

    Ok, whenever I dispose of a HDD, I like to dismantle it to get the rare earth magnets out...

    This particular HDD (3ish gig) was well on its way out, so I thought I'd make a quick video called hard drive abuse It's surprising how powerful the motor is in a hard drive. After I made this vid (with the video function on my canon powershot G5) the hard drive was definitely ready for the bin! (minus the magnet) More fun than just binning it straight away


    Stupid Video Here (6.7MB)

    Dial up unfriendly - sorry!

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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
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    Hehe, nice. What's the stuff on the surface of the platters? Is it just the surface tarnishing when it's exposed to air?

    Next time you do it, throw some bugs in.

  3. #3
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    nice one mate, ive always wanted to see a hard drive spinning with the cover off.
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 1998
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    Adelaide, South Australia
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    Originally posted by MuFu
    Hehe, nice. What's the stuff on the surface of the platters? Is it just the surface tarnishing when it's exposed to air?
    Hard drive platters don't tarnish, certainly not that quickly. My guess would be physical damage caused by the dust that got in between the heads and the platters.
    Safe computing is a habit, not a toolkit.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
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    lol, glad you like it. The weird stuff on the platters is actually the result of me messing around with a bit of blu tac...The heads then seemed to like to go and polish it again, it was quite amusing. (and I was bored)

    Temp Rig:
    AthlonXP 1800, Asus A7N266-VM
    256 PC2100, 40Gb 5400RPM HDD
    GeForce MX440 (for now)
    Tagan 330W PSU, XP SP2

    Broken Rig:
    AMD 2600+ Barton
    Abit NF7 V2.0 Mainboard
    XFX GeForce FX5200, 256 DDR
    LiteOn DVD Writer
    WD 80Gig
    Seagate 120Gig
    512Mb Kingston PC3200
    Tagan 330W PSU
    WinXP - Pro SP2

    Laptop : HP Pavilion ze2000 - Centrino 1.6Ghz XP Home/SP2

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
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    6,334
    pretty amazing how fast they spin huh? then you gotta think what a cdrom does for 52x speed- over 30k rpm! thats faster than dremels! its amazing how they can be read at that speed at all

  7. #7
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    Originally posted by krupted
    its amazing how they can be read at that speed at all
    yeah very true, and acctually pretty quiet for that speed!

    BTW andy, was that a 5400RPM drive or a 7200RPM?
    Shuttle System l Intel Core2Extreme l 8GB Ram l 64GB OCZ SSD l Windows 7 Ultimate X64
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  8. #8
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    Alienware X-51, Core i3@3.3, 4 gb 1333, 1 TB WD, Evga Geforce 650ti

  9. #9
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    Aug 2003
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    Derby, UK
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    That was a 5400rpm

    Yeah I can't believe the things actually work either, especially when you see the read heads just instantly flick to exactly the right place on the disk to read the data. Just leaves me thinking...how the heck did it do that?

    Temp Rig:
    AthlonXP 1800, Asus A7N266-VM
    256 PC2100, 40Gb 5400RPM HDD
    GeForce MX440 (for now)
    Tagan 330W PSU, XP SP2

    Broken Rig:
    AMD 2600+ Barton
    Abit NF7 V2.0 Mainboard
    XFX GeForce FX5200, 256 DDR
    LiteOn DVD Writer
    WD 80Gig
    Seagate 120Gig
    512Mb Kingston PC3200
    Tagan 330W PSU
    WinXP - Pro SP2

    Laptop : HP Pavilion ze2000 - Centrino 1.6Ghz XP Home/SP2

  10. #10
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    imagine a 15,000RPM

    its crazy how it manages to move that fast to the right place, no wonder they break.
    Shuttle System l Intel Core2Extreme l 8GB Ram l 64GB OCZ SSD l Windows 7 Ultimate X64
    IBM ThinkPad T60 l 2GHz Core2Duo l 4GB Ram l 60GB Kingston SSD l Windows 7 Ultimate X64

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