...a staggering twenty megabytes of disk space

dejitaru

Banned
Sep 29, 2002
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Yeah, those were the days.
I was looking at a 6MB hard drive platter 5 feet across.
Now that we're all big, bad, and advanced, how difficult would it be to build a small hard drive by hand?
 

Mday

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
18,647
1
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depends...

do you have the capabilities of doing vapor deposition to create the data layers on the platters?

can you work in a clean room as to not even get any stray atoms onto a platter, thus rendering some megabytes of the platter unusuable?

can you wire the read and write heads and keep them aligned without causing problems?
 

Peter

Elite Member
Oct 15, 1999
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When I look at the 5-MByte brick I still use for power supply testing :), I'd say you couldn't even achieve that one on any hobby bench.

It's a full height (that's two of today's drive bays, folks!) 5,25" drive, made by BASF.
 

dejitaru

Banned
Sep 29, 2002
627
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Originally posted by: Mday
depends...

do you have the capabilities of doing vapor deposition to create the data layers on the platters?

can you work in a clean room as to not even get any stray atoms onto a platter, thus rendering some megabytes of the platter unusuable?

can you wire the read and write heads and keep them aligned without causing problems?
Quite possibly. Yet I'm storing nothing critical, so an error or two is acceptable. I could store a few hundred k on a roll of toilet paper.

I'm not going into mass production, I just want to build a drive from components.
 

stebesplace

Senior member
Nov 18, 2002
580
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If you have the means and the motive, and you have a clean shop, go ahead and build it, report back once your done. I'de love to hear what happens.

-Steve