I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed >"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed "discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
On Fri, 23 Feb 2024 15:49:01 -0700, Don Y
<blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
I've often wondered that, too. Anyone know?
On 23/02/2024 22:49, Don Y wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
It is an anti-tamper measure so that the manufacturer can tell if the disk has
been opened up to atmosphere outside of a clean room without having to bother with a visual examination.
Breaking the seal on the disk physical enclosure voids warrantee.
On 25/02/2024 9:23 pm, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Fri, 23 Feb 2024 15:49:01 -0700, Don Y
<blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
I've often wondered that, too. Anyone know?
Disk reading/writing heads fly very close to the rotating surface being >written. Atmospheric dust is bigger than the gap,and could wreck the
process.
Hard disks are assembled in clean rooms, so the internal space starts
off dust-free. Atmospheric pressure inside the unit has to match outside >air-pressure, but the two spaces are connected by a slightly porous >air-filter that lets gas in and out, but no dust.
You could build a hermitically sealed disk drive, but you'd have to make
the structure stronger if you did that, and it would cost more. And gas >molecules would diffuse in and out anyway.
On 2/25/2024 3:20 AM, Martin Brown wrote:
On 23/02/2024 22:49, Don Y wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
It is an anti-tamper measure so that the manufacturer can tell if the disk >> has been opened up to atmosphere outside of a clean room without having to >> bother with a visual examination.
Breaking the seal on the disk physical enclosure voids warrantee.
As would removing the PCB attached to the OUTSIDE of the drive enclosure.
Yet there are no similar measures "protecting" it!
Who (customer/user) would actually *think* they could repair something MECHANICAL inside the drive? The dimensions of the mechanisms and tolerances thereon would make any such *attempt* ludicrous.
On Mon, 26 Feb 2024 02:11:31 +1100, Bill Sloman <bill.sloman@ieee.org>
wrote:
On 25/02/2024 9:23 pm, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Fri, 23 Feb 2024 15:49:01 -0700, Don Y
<blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
Note that this differs from the "do not cover this port" (that
I assume is there to allow for pressure equalization?).
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
I've often wondered that, too. Anyone know?
Disk reading/writing heads fly very close to the rotating surface being
written. Atmospheric dust is bigger than the gap,and could wreck the
process.
Hard disks are assembled in clean rooms, so the internal space starts
off dust-free. Atmospheric pressure inside the unit has to match outside
air-pressure, but the two spaces are connected by a slightly porous
air-filter that lets gas in and out, but no dust.
You could build a hermitically sealed disk drive, but you'd have to make
the structure stronger if you did that, and it would cost more. And gas
molecules would diffuse in and out anyway.
I would guess it depends on what the container is made from. Glass
seems to be highly effective in preventing any diffusion if thermionic
valves ('tubes') are anything to go by.
molecules would diffuse in and out anyway.
I would guess it depends on what the container is made from. Glass
seems to be highly effective in preventing any diffusion if thermionic valves ('tubes') are anything to go by.
The filament does act a "getter", and most tubes included an explicitly introduced getter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Getter
People who have worked with vacuum systems do tend to know about them.
In article <urjv00$324kk$1@dont-email.me>, bill.sloman@ieee.org says...
molecules would diffuse in and out anyway.
I would guess it depends on what the container is made from. Glass
seems to be highly effective in preventing any diffusion if thermionic
valves ('tubes') are anything to go by.
The filament does act a "getter", and most tubes included an explicitly
introduced getter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Getter
People who have worked with vacuum systems do tend to know about them.
The filament does not act as the getter in vacuum tubes. It is the
plate that acts as the getter. In most tubes that use the plate it must
be heated to red hot.
The heater in the Wiki article is a heater in the vacuum pump system,
totally different than the vacuum tube.
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed "discardable").
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
On 2024-02-23, Don Y <blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote:
I've been digging through piles of 3.5" disk drives (spinning rust).
All seem to have "seals" to cover any hardware that "shouldn't be
removed". Often, the seals are intentionally inconspicuous
(like a label that is so large that it covers these fasteners
as a matter of course -- or, metallic to mimic the metal cover).
But, not always ("Gee, what's under this sticky round dot?")
I don't think anyone would intentionally remove those fasteners
thinking they could "fix" a broken disk (we remove them to decompose
the disks into recyclable parts; the drive already being deemed
"discardable").
The basic rules of drive repair are only open in a clean room, and
thus the seals are to indicate actions that would actually void the
warranty. Unlike the warranty stickers seen on appliances that are
just there to scare off the curious. if you're in a clean room
disassembling a hard drive the cost of the voided warranty is lost in
the noise of all the other costs.
So, are they there to detect signs of tampering (voided
warranty)? Or, discourage folks who are too curious for
their own good?
Certainly the first, I can't think of anything inside a
drive that would be a danger to someone competent enough
to open it, unless they going to eat the magnets or
something dumb like that.
I can't imagine they would add manufacturing steps to
cover these fasteners if there wasn't some perceived
value to doing so...
The value is avoiding unneccesary warranty returns.
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