01-22-2004, 12:53 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Crazy
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Vibrations
Hello all. I have a question about computer hard drives. I work in construction and yesterday we restarted a job that had been previously shut down. I had a problem with one of the neighbors. He owns a computer imaging company and he was very upset at us yesterday when we started our work. We were installing metal sheeting around the perimeter of the job site. Driving this sheeting into the ground can cause a lot of noise and vibration. The owner came out and started yelling at me because the vibrations were causing his hard drives to bounce up and down. He also said that the work we had previously done had ruined all his hard drives and that he had to replace all of them because of us. It seemed like a load of BS to me but then again I really don’t know. Can vibrations from something like this really ruin computer hard drives? Please let me know because I am getting ready to tell this guy what he can do with his hard drives.
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01-22-2004, 01:10 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Chicago
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Well all I know is that if the vibrations are hard enough to make the platters bounce around or hit anything, it can surely cause a hard drive to die or fail. But I have had my computer fall off of a desk while running and it still worked. My vote would be no, he is talking out of his ass.
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01-22-2004, 01:14 PM | #3 (permalink) | |
beauty in the breakdown
Location: Chapel Hill, NC
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Quote:
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01-22-2004, 05:38 PM | #4 (permalink) |
Psycho
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I second this. If the vibrations are strong enough to kill his HDs then he'd also have a lot more damage than just to his computer.
Small vibrations can kill drives, but only over long periods of time. I doubt this construction project would've gone on long enough to cause that.
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"Empirically observed covariation is a necessary but not sufficient condition for causality" - Edward Tufte |
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