Request Help

Request Help

We are happy to help! Please fill out this form or call us
Call: 866-438-6932

Hard Drives: A Destiny Of Failure!

Hard disk drives will always and ultimitely FAIL! Even with all the new technologies that arise such as perpendicular recording, the most basic element of hard drives, their ability to store data, is a lost cause. Faced with the daunting task of working on a technology destined to fail, hard drive manufacturers have to overcome the fact that they are designing a device to store data knowing that by design, the device will fail. Well isn’t that why we are in the hard drive recovery business after all?

Now that we have gotten the sad truth out of the way, what do hard drive manufactureres do about it?

  1. S.M.A.R.T. Technologies. This system was notifies the user when the drive may be failing. Several components such as drive speed, track to track time, head placement and many other tests are performed on the drives daily. These tests are used in a comparison over time and can show a pattern of device failure. During the degradation cycle there is a manufacturer assigned percentage used that will alert the user of impending data loss. For instance, if a drive has been spinning at 7200 RPM for several months, then over the last several weeks the RPMs drop to 7000 RPM, this may be flagged as an impending problem and the user will be notified that possible data loss may occur in the near future. It is up to the user to backup the data and replace the failing hard disk drive or prepare for data recovery.
  2. Sector Map. The sector map consists of two lists. The primary list, which is set at factory, maps all bad sectors out. These bad sectors are found and mapped before the drive is sold. In other words, hard drives are expected to have bad sectors. There is no such thing as a perfect hard drive. A hard disk drive would cost several thousand dollars to the consumer if manufacturers created the means to make a perfect hard drive. In order to keep costs down, drive remapping is used. Now, once the list of all the bad sectors are made at the factory the drive is then shipped and sold. As the drive performs its day to day functions more bad sectors will appear. It is inevitable. These bad sectors are then mapped to another list. Both of the bad sector lists are mapped to a reserved area of the hard drive. There are only so many reserved area sectors for the firmware to remap to. Once these sectors are exhausted the firmware cannot remap and the bad sectors become part of your live data.

Signs that a drive has used its reserved sector area are, slow reads, slow boot sequence, operating system may seem to lock, may have to reboot several times before the operating system comes up. A chronic bad sector problem will eventually cause file loss, and ultimately the drive will not be able to identify itself to the BIOS and your data is either lost, or you will need hard drive recovery services.

The hard disk drive has one or more platters that are made of glass or aluminum coated with magnetic iron oxide particles. The platters spin continuously as the heads travel in and out along a seek pattern. A typical hard drive contains several of these 3.5-inch platters, which can contain tens of billions of individual bits.

The higher the Ariel density of the hard disk’s platters, the more bits that can be packed into each square inch of platter real estate. A platter is segregated into tens of thousands of concentric tracks. Because tons of information can be stored in one track, the tracks are broken down into smaller units called sectors. Each sector can hold about 512 bytes of data. Disk platters are mounted in a stacked formation on a spindle A spindle motor turns the platters at very high speed, typically between 5,400 and 7,200 rotations per minute, but as fast as 15,000 rotations per minute(RPM’S). The platters spin so that the appropriate sector or sectors containing the data can be positioned underneath one of the drive’s reading heads. There’s one head per platter, and all the heads move in unison.

Heads

Each head in the hard drive is mounted onto a slider, which is mounted onto an arm. A mechanical device called an actuator controls each hard drive arm. The actuator moves the arm to the correct position on the spinning platter, which puts the head in the correct position. The reading head ( reading and writing heads are separate) floats about 2/1,000,000 of an inch above the disk surface. As it passes over the appropriate disk sectors, it interprets the magnetic pulses and converts them to electrical pulses that can be interpreted as 1s and 0s.

Although the head may look large, actually the sensitive part of the head is defined by micro lithographic methods so that the actual exposed portion of the head,which can either read or write the information on the disk,is very small-comparable to the dimensions of features on a microchip! As the manufacturing technology has improved over the years they have been able to shrink this area down to smaller and smaller sizes, and that is how the hard disk memories have risen to such large figures now. In addition they have increased the density of magnetic particles on the disk which makes the storage capacity larger. For example in 1991 the density of storage memory was about 0.l3 Gbits/square inch. In 1998 it was up to around 4 Gbits (30X the density!). At the same time the lithography limit of the sensitive head area was about 4.5 uMeters in 1991, and in 1998 was down to 0.5 uMeters, reduced by a factor of 9. So that is how the storage density of the disks is now up to 200 GB or higher.

Any deviation in the platter or head can cause the hard drive to start clicking. If it starts clicking you will need hard drive recovery.

The above description doesn’t take into consideration perpendicular recording which is a whole other ball game whan it comes to ariel density and data storage. How and why a hard drive works leads us to understand why they and how hard drives fail.

Tags:

8 Responses to “Hard Drives: A Destiny Of Failure!”

  1. Richard September 22, 2010 3:15 am #

    One of my HD seems to be running at a higher spinning speed and it has a loud humming noise because it seems to be spinning faster than it should. What is making this happen and is there anything that can be done about it?

    • Jacqui Best October 18, 2010 4:02 pm #

      Richard,

      From what. You have said I would guess the motor may be going. My hardware knowledge of the actual internal working parts of the hard dive is limited to what I need to know to do software support. I will tell you that any hard drive making weird noises is not a good sign and if you still have access tot he drive it may be best to get the data off and RMA the hard drive.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Hard Drive Recovery: Why Use A Service - February 10, 2007

    […] Drive Recovery. Three words that encompass so much. In my post about why hard drives fail I explained how hard disk manufacturers are burdened with the fact they are producing a product […]

  2. Backup Solutions 2: Small Network Attached Storage - February 11, 2007

    […] recovery case studies. The fact is everyone faces data loss at one time or another. My post about How and Why Hard Drives Fail has gotten a lot of attention and has raised a lot of questions. The most common is what do we do […]

  3. Hard Drive Recovery Profile: Western Digital - February 15, 2007

    […] is no matter who you choose to buy a hard drive from, they will all fail. Learn more about “Why Hard Drives Fail“. Keep in mind that it is important to back up your data and avoid hard drive […]

  4. Hitachi Laptop Hard Drive Data Recovery - February 27, 2007

    […] HARD DRIVES FAIL! If you are interested in the reason for the failures read my wife’s post Why Hard Drives Fail . If you are reading this you probably need Hitachi laptop data recovery, more than likely, […]

  5. DTI Data Recovery Hard Drive Manufacturer Warranty : DTI Data Recovery Hard Disk Repair Resources - May 16, 2007

    […] work to create quality products, they are often fighting a losing battle. Read my post Why Hard Drives Fail for more […]

  6. Recovering Data From A Laptop | Hard Drive Recovery Resources From DTI Data Recovery - June 2, 2008

    […] from data loss. If you want to know more about those 2 things read my wife Victoria’s post: Hard Drives A Destiny Of Failure to learn […]

Leave a Reply

//www.googleadservices.com/pagead/conversion.js