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| Elementary knowledge of hard disk - History of hard disk development |
The hard disk drive has a short and fascinating history.
In 24 years it evolved from a monstrosity with fifty
two-foot diameter disks holding five MBytes (5,000,000
bytes) of data to today's drives measuring 3 /12 inches
wide and an inch high (and smaller) holding 400 GBytes
(400,000,000,000 bytes/characters). Here, then, is the
short history of this marvelous device.
Before the disk drive there were drums. In 1950
Engineering Research Associates of Minneapolis built the
first commercial magnetic drum storage unit for the U.S.
Navy, the ERA 110. It could store one million bits of
data and retrieve a word in 5 thousandths of a second.
In 1956 IBM invented the first computer
disk storage system, the 305 RAMAC (Random Access Method
of Accounting and Control). This system could store five
MBytes. It had fifty, 24-inch diameter disks!
By 1961 IBM had invented the first disk drive
with air bearing heads and in 1963 they introduced the
removable disk pack drive.
In 1970 the eight inch floppy disk
drive was introduced by IBM. My first floppy drives were
made by Shugart who was one of the "dirty dozen" who
left IBM to start their own companies. In 1981 two
Shugart 8 inch floppy drives with enclosure and power
supply cost me about $350.00. They were for my second
computer. My first computer had no drives at all.
In 1973 IBM shipped the model 3340
Winchester sealed hard disk drive, the predecessor of
all current hard disk drives. The 3340 had two spindles
each with a capacity of 30 MBytes, and the term "30/30
Winchester" was thus coined.
In 1980, Seagate Technology introduced
the first hard disk drive for microcomputers, the ST506.
It was a full height (twice as high as most current 5
1/4" drives) 5 1/4" drive, with a stepper motor, and
held 5 Mbytes. My first hard disk drive was an ST506. I
cannot remember exactly how much it cost, but it plus
its enclosure, etc. was well over a thousand dollars. It
took me three years to fill the drive. Also, in 1980
Phillips introduced the first optical laser drive. In
the early 80's, the first 5 1/4" hard disks with voice
coil actuators (more on this later) started shipping in
volume, but stepper motor drives continued in production
into the early 1990's. In 1981, Sony shipped the first 3
1/2" floppy drives.
In 1983 Rodime made the first 3.5 inch
rigid disk drive. The first CD-ROM drives were shipped
in 1984, and "Grolier's Electronic Encyclopedia,"
followed in 1985. The 3 1/2" IDE drive started its
existence as a drive on a plug-in expansion board, or
"hard card." The hard card included the drive on the
controller which, in turn, evolved into Integrated
Device Electronics (IDE) hard disk drive, where the
controller became incorporated into the printed circuit
on the bottom of the hard disk drive. Quantum made the
first hard card in 1985.
In 1986 the first 3 /12" hard disks
with voice coil actuators were introduced by Conner in
volume, but half (1.6") and full height 5 1/4" drives
persisted for several years. In 1988 Conner introduced
the first one inch high 3 1/2" hard disk drives. In the
same year PrairieTek shipped the first 2 1/2" hard
disks.
In 1997 Seagate introduced the first 7,200 RPM, Ultra
ATA hard disk drive for desktop computers and in
February of this year they introduced the first 15,000
RPM hard disk drive, the Cheetah X15. Milestones for IDE
DMA, ATA/33, and ATA/66 drives follow:
1994 DMA, Mode 2 at 16.6 MB/s
1997 Ultra ATA/33 at 33.3 MB/s
1999 Ultra ATA/66 at 66.6 MB/s
6/20/00 IBM triples the capacity of the
world's smallest hard disk drive. This drive holds one
gigabyte on a disk which is the size of an American
quarter. The world's first gigabyte-capacity disk drive,
the IBM 3380, introduced in 1980, was the size of a
refrigerator, weighed 550 pounds (about 250 kg), and had
a price tag of $40,000.
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