Hard Drive Analogy

dirtbikerac

New Member
Hey,

I read an analogy a while ago on the internet about Hard Drives and can not find it again! It went something like this:

If the pin on a hard drive was a Boeing 747, and the disk was earth, the plane would be traveling x inches from the ground, traveling at x mph, and counting x blades of grass every x seconds.

It went something like that, and was very fascinating and put a new spin on how amazing today's hard drives are. Anyways, if you find it, please post!

Dirtbikerac
 

Zatharus

VIP Member
You are referring to this article from Tom's Hardware.

From the article:
The dimensions of the head are impressive. With a width of less than a hundred nanometers and a thickness of about ten, it flies above the platter at a speed of up to 15,000 RPM, at a height that’s the equivalent of 40 atoms. If you start multiplying these infinitesimally small numbers, you begin to get an idea of their significance.

Consider this little comparison: if the read/write head were a Boeing 747, and the hard-disk platter were the surface of the Earth:



  • The head would fly at Mach 800
  • At less than one centimeter from the ground
  • And count every blade of grass
  • Making fewer than 10 unrecoverable counting errors in an area equivalent to all of Ireland.
 

Cromewell

Administrator
Staff member
The analogy is a little off though, flying 1 cm off the ground is much more difficult when you have hills to contend with...of course it'd be pretty hard to do on level terrain too :p
 
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