DocumentCode :
2858894
Title :
Performance impact of external vibration on consumer-grade and enterprise-class disk drives
Author :
Ruwart, Thomas M. ; Lu, Yingping
fYear :
2005
fDate :
11-14 April 2005
Firstpage :
307
Lastpage :
315
Abstract :
This paper describes a simple but effective method to generate and observe the effects of external vibration on the read and write bandwidth of a disk drive. Furthermore, it quantifies these effects as a first-order numerical approximation. This paper is not intended to rate disk drives relative to manufacturer, model, size, form factor, etc. Rather it is simply intended to answer the simple questions of "Is there a performance impact of external vibration on a disk drive?" and "How significant is that impact?" After testing several 3.5- and 2.5-inch consumer-grade and enterprise-class disk drives the conclusion is that the consumer-grade disk drives are more sensitive to external vibration. In the presence of an external vibration caused by adjacent disk drive seek operations the bandwidth performance of a consumer-grade disk drive "feeling" these vibrations will decrease about 10%-15% when reading data and about 25%-40% when writing data. The final qualitative result of this study is that disk drive packaging is likely the most significant factor in reducing the vibrational effects.
Keywords :
approximation theory; disc drives; disc storage; vibrations; consumer-grade disk drives; disk drive packaging; enterprise-class disk drives; external vibration performance impact; first-order numerical approximation; Availability; Bandwidth; Costs; Disk drives; Microcomputers; Packaging; Pulp manufacturing; Testing; Virtual manufacturing; Writing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Mass Storage Systems and Technologies, 2005. Proceedings. 22nd IEEE / 13th NASA Goddard Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2318-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MSST.2005.24
Filename :
1410750
Link To Document :
بازگشت