Cracking open a Maxtor hard drive - TechRepublic

Cracking open a Maxtor hard drive

  • 101_hard_drive.jpg

    Maxtor hard drive teardown

    \n\tI’ve always wanted to open and hard drive and take a good look at the insides. So when this old spare hard drive came along I decided to satisfy my curiosity by making a gallery for our Cracking Open series.
    \n\t
    \n\tThe sacrificial lamb in this case is a Maxtor 10GB drive circa 1998.

    \n\t\n\n

  • Underneath the circuit board

    Underneath the circit board is some padding and two sets of contacts. Interestingly, there are no plugs.

  • Tape removed

    I’m not sure why there was tape on this side. Revoving the one piece of tape reveals the underside of the plate chamber. The drive, if it worked before, does not work now for sure.

  • Armature

    A side angle look at the armature. There is not much room for error.

  • Magnet

    There are two magnets in the armature drive housing. The magnets are surprisingly powerful. I thought magnets were a no-no when it comes to hard drives, but I guess the problem is really random magnets.

  • Circuitry

    This circuitry controls the movement and tells the read/write heads what to do.

  • Both magnets

    It takes a great deal of strength to separate this housing when they are together — much more strength then I would have thought was necessary. I passed it around the office and watched my colleagues sttruggle to separate them — it surprised all of us.

  • Caulking

    The gasket around the top of the drive is tacky. It must make a solid seal.

  • Plates removed

    The memory plates slide onto a central hub separated by the metal rings. The entire setup is seemingly very simple.

  • I see me

    The plates make excellent mirrors.

  • Shine on

    There is a gash on this plate. I don’t know if it was there when I started this project, but if it was, the drive was dead.

  • Shell

    Not much to the shell.

  • Read/write heads

    Here is a closer look at the read/write heads. As you can see they are very delicate. The mere act of removing the armature mangled the ends.

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Mark W. Kaelin

Mark W. Kaelin has been writing and editing stories about the information technology industry, software, hardware, gaming, finance, accounting, and technology geekdom for more than 30 years.