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HARDWARE - SECONDARY STORAGE - HARD DISKS
Hard Disks (Hard Drives)
A hard disk is a magnetic disk made of metal and
covered with a magnetic recording surface.
Hard
disks come in removable and fixed varieties that
hold from several hundreds of megabytes to several
gigabytes. They are tightly sealed to
prevent any foreign matter from getting inside, which causes head crash.
Interface Type
- IDE(Integrated
Drive Electronics): An IDE
interface has a disk drive that contains
its own controller electronics. The IDE
interface is also called an AT and XT
interface. IDE-ready motherboards have
a 40-pin socket that connects directly
to an IDE drive eliminating the use of
an expansion slot.
SCSI (Small Computer System
Interface): SCSI is pronounced
scuzzy. This is an 8-bit-bus peripheral
interface for up to seven peripherals. The SCSI
bus allows any two devices to communicate at one
time (host to peripheral, peripheral to
peripheral). SCSI provides high-speed
(4MB/sec.), parallel data transfer and multiple
peripheral connections while taking only one
expansion slot.
Access Time
- Access time: This is an
average time taken to complete the transfer
of data after the request instruction has
been enacted. Today's fast hard drives have
access times under 10 milliseconds (ms).
Access time is made up of the following four
times.
- Seek Time: This is the
time taken to move an access arm to a
certain track on a disk after the
computer requests data. Most of the
access time is made up of seek time.
- Head Switching Time: The
time taken for changing from one
read/write head to another to read from
or write on another part on a disk.
- Search Time: It is also
called rotational delay time.
This is a time required for the
read/write head to locate particular
position on a track.
- Data Transfer Time: This
is the time for data to be transferred
from the disk to primary storage or vice
versa.
Different Forms of Hard Disks
- Internal Hard Disk: Internal
hard disk is made up of several metallic platters, a motor, an access arm
and read-write heads sealed inside a
container.
An internal hard disk is
looked like a part of a system unit inside
a computer cabinet. There are two sizes
of drives (5.25" and 3.5" in a diameter).
3.5" hard disks are faster because the
access arm travels shorter distances
across the diameter of the disk.
Internal
hard disks have advantages over flexible
disks. They are high capacity and
speed. The disadvantage of
internal hard disks or hardcards is
that they have only a fixed amount of
storage and cannot be easily removed.
- External Hard-Disk Drives: This is a drive that is not built
into the system cabinet of microcomputers.
External hard disk drives are treated as
peripherals. Using external hard disk
drives, we can expand the hard disk
capacity when all available drive bays are
occupied.
- Hard Disk Cartridges: A
cartridge is a removable storage module,
so a hard disk cartridge contains disks in
the module. They can be removed from a
dock easily and can give fast access to
large data. An internal or external dock
is available.
In internal hard disks and
external hard disk drives, the storage
capacity is fixed, but in the hard disk
cartridge, the capacity limitation of
storage does not exist. That is, a user
may add more cartridges any time.
- Removable Drives with Cartridges:
Today's advanced technology allows
a new form of removable storage. The
technology combines the function of the
hard disk drive and the convenience of the
hard disk cartridge. This form consists
of a removable drive and several
cartridges.
The removable drive looks
like an external floppy disk drive. And
the cartridge resembles a floppy disk and
allows users to add 100 MB or 1 GB at a
time. It allows an SCSI connection as
well as a parallel port connection. Its low cost is a big advantage.
- Floppy Disks
- Hard Disks
- Optical Disks
- Magnetic Tapes
- Cache Memory
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