Originally posted by: Pariah
Originally posted by: CrispyFried
If you used a magnet like that the low level info would be destroyed as well as microcode and other info in the manufactureres area of the platter. The drive would be useless unless you ran some serious (and expensive) utils on it.
You don't have a magnet in your house strong enough to flip bits in your hard drive. Ironically, the strongest magnet in your house is the rare earth magnet already in your hard drive moving the read head assembly. You need something like a laboratory degausser to wipe out a hard drive.
Hard drives are built in class 100 cleanrooms (100 parts per cubic foot (.5 microns or larger)). By comparison, your typical office has about 10,000 times more airborne particles per cubic foot that can damage a hard drive. If you want to open your hard drive, go ahead, just don't do it with a drive you want to continue using. The drive will still function, but anything that got into the enclosure could potentially corrupt data. A hard drive head flys over the platters at 1/3 the height of a
fingerprint, so it doesn't take a very big particle to cause problems with your drive.