Glossary – Maxtor Computer Drive User Manual

Page 65

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GLOSSARY

Maxtor DiamondMax 8S 40GB SATA

G-7

SCSI –

Acronym for Small Computer

System Interface, an American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) version of Shugart
Associates' SASI interface between the
computer and controller. SCSI has grown in
popularity and is one of the most flexible and
intelligent interfaces available.

SECTOR

– A section of space along a track

on the disk, or the data that is stored in that
section. Hard disks most often have sectors
that are 512 data bytes long plus several bytes
overhead for error correcting codes. Each
sector is preceded by ID data known as a
header, which cannot be overwritten.

SEEK

– A movement of the disk read/write

head in or out to a specific track.

SERVO DATA

– Magnetic markings

written on the media that guide the
read/write heads to the proper position.

SERVO SURFACE

– A separate surface

containing only positioning and disk timing
information but no data.

SETTLE TIME

– The interval between

when a track to track movement of the head
stops, and when the residual vibration and
movement dies down to a level sufficient for
reliable reading or writing.

SHOCK RATING

– A rating (expressed in

Gs) of how much shock a disk drive can
sustain without damage.

SOFT ERROR

– An error in reading data

from the disk that does not recur if the same
data is reread. Often caused by power
fluctuations or noise spikes.

SOFT SECTORED

– Disks that mark the

beginning of each sector of data within a track
by a magnetic pattern.

SPINDLE

– The center shaft of the disk

upon which the drive’s platters are mounted.

SPUTTER

– A type of coating process used

to apply the magnetic coating to some
high-performance disks. In sputtering, the
disks are placed in a vacuum chamber and the

coating is vaporized and deposited on the
disks. The resulting surface is hard, smooth,
and capable of storing data at high density.
Maxtor disk drives use sputtered thin film
disks.

SOF -

Start Of Frame

STEPPER –

A type of motor that moves in

discrete amounts for each input electrical
pulse. Stepper motors used to be widely used
for read/write head positioner, since they can
be geared to move the head one track per
step. Stepper motors are not as fast or reliable
as the rotary voice coil actuators which
Maxtor disk drives use.

SUBSTRATE

– The material the disk

platter is made of beneath the magnetic
coating. Hard disks are generally made of
aluminum or magnesium alloy (or glass, for
optical disks) while the substrate of floppies is
usually mylar.

SURFACE

– The top or bottom side of the

platter which is coated with the magnetic
material for recording data. On some drives
one surface may be reserved for positioning
information.

T

THIN FILM

– A type of coating, used for

disk surfaces. Thin film surfaces allow more
bits to be stored per disk.

TPI

– Acronym for tracks per inch. The

number of tracks or cylinders that are written
in each inch of travel across the surface of a
disk.

TRACK

– One of the many concentric

magnetic circle patterns written on a disk
surface as a guide to where to store and read
the data.

TRACK DENSITY

– How closely the

tracks are packed on a disk surface. The
number is specified as tracks per inch (TPI).

TRACK TO TRACK SEEK TIME

– The

time required for the read/write heads to
move to an adjacent track.

TRANSFER RATE

– The rate at which the

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