Active hard-drive protection

In computer hardware, active hard-drive protection refers to technology that attempts to avoid or reduce mechanical damage to hard disk drives by preparing the disk(s) prior to impact. This approach is mainly used in laptop computers that are frequently carried around and more prone to impacts than desktop computers.

Implementation

Usually the system consists of accelerometers that alert the system when excess acceleration or vibration is detected. The software then tells the hard disk to unload its heads to prevent them coming in contact with the platter, thus potentially preventing head crash.[1]

This technology only engages if the hard drive is running at the moment of impact. Modern hard drives are designed to unload their heads when they lose power.

Many laptop vendors have implemented this technology under different names:[2]

Some hard-disk drives also include this technology, needing no cooperation from the system. For example:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Andrew Ku (2003-10-07). "IBM ThinkVantage Technologies: Hard Drive Active Protection". AnandTech. http://www.anandtech.com/mobile/showdoc.aspx?i=1893&p=2. 
  2. ^ "Just Add Wheels: Leveraging Commodity Laptop Hardware for Robotics and AI Education". 2008. http://robotics.usc.edu/~jonathsk/research/publications/2008_Kelly_Wheels.pdf. "At least three different manufacturers now offer models with built-in accelerometers: The Apple Sudden Motion Sensor, IBM HD Active Protection System and Acer GraviSense"