Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive?
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Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive?
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Greysky
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 2:58 am    Post subject: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.

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Ian Stirling
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 4:04 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Greysky <greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.

Security torx probably.
Quote:
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the

Super magnets (AIUI) will not do a bulk erase od the disk.
Thermite works for me.
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Adrian Jansen
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 4:31 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Greysky wrote:
Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.


Surely the chances of it ever working again after being opened and

having a few dirty fingers on the platters are negligible ? Who is ever
going to try ? After you finish the show and tell, just remove or break
a few chips on the controller board. This will ensure its pretty
inoperable.

--
Regards,

Adrian Jansen adrianjansen at internode dot on dot net
Design Engineer J & K Micro Systems
Microcomputer solutions for industrial control
Note reply address is invalid, convert address above to machine form.

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Jim Thompson
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 4:53 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 08:31:51 +1000, Adrian Jansen <adrian@qq.vv.net>
wrote:

Quote:
Greysky wrote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.


Surely the chances of it ever working again after being opened and
having a few dirty fingers on the platters are negligible ? Who is ever
going to try ? After you finish the show and tell, just remove or break
a few chips on the controller board. This will ensure its pretty
inoperable.

Maxtor's data recovery service routinely changes out the controller
board. To remove data just use an AC electromagnet.

...Jim Thompson
--
| James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens |
| Analog Innovations, Inc. | et |
| Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC's and Discrete Systems | manus |
| Phoenix, Arizona Voice:(480)460-2350 | |
| E-mail Address at Website Fax:(480)460-2142 | Brass Rat |
| http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 |

I love to cook with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food.
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John Larkin
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 6:11 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 20:58:03 GMT, "Greysky"
<greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.


Just bend the platters a tiny bit.

What's on them, anyhow?

John
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DaveC
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 6:11 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

"Greysky" <greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote in
news:vVPOd.2918$lz5.94@newssvr24.news.prodigy.net:

Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was
still under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to
turn it into a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I
finally managed to get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner
platters. Someone told me a Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on
the cover plate - they were wrong. I had to drill them off. Now, I
need to know a sure fire way of wiping data off the platters for good.
The machine died before I could erase it inside the computer, so far
I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped directly onto the
platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think this is
enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for
the kids. Thanks.



You must work for some sort of top-secret government agency. But spy's
are everywhere in elementary school. Can't be too careful.

DaveC

----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----
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Guy Macon
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 6:11 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Jim Thompson wrote:

Quote:
To remove data just use an AC electromagnet.

Radio shack sells a powerful one, cheap. Get the videotape
eraser, not the weaker audiontape eraser.
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Guy Macon
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 6:11 am    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Adrian Jansen wrote:

Quote:
Surely the chances of it ever working again after being opened and
having a few dirty fingers on the platters are negligible ?
Who is ever going to try ?

That would be me.

2ea 520MB western digital drives. Standard office environment,
drive cover removed, running DOS scandisk in a looping bat file.

First drive lasted 8 hours. Second drive lasted 4 hours.

I expect that even a simple dust cover would extend this time,
and that a newer, higher capacity drive would crash sooner.
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Mac
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 12:35 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 20:58:03 +0000, Greysky wrote:

Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.

I don't have any practical experience with this, but IIRC, there is a
temperature above which magnetic materials become very free to realign
their magnetic polarity. This temperature is called the Curie temperature
or Curie point, I think.

So, if you heat the disk material above its Curie point in the presence
of a strong magnetic field (electro-magnet, maybe?) you should effectively
render the disk unreadable.

Good luck!

--Mac
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Paul Burke
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 2:51 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Mac wrote:

Quote:

there is a
temperature above which magnetic materials become very free to realign
their magnetic polarity. This temperature is called the Curie temperature
or Curie point, I think.


There are various Curie points, graded from korma to vindaloo.

Paul Burke
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Paul ( Skiing8 )
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 3:22 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

"John Larkin" <jjlarkin@highSNIPlandTHIStechPLEASEnology.com> wrote in
message news:1i2o01ldnhn3e5d2pu30hno7rpdkvep2ks@4ax.com...
Quote:
On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 20:58:03 GMT, "Greysky"
greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it
into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed
to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me
a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were
wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping
data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it
inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you
think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for
the
kids. Thanks.


Just bend the platters a tiny bit.

What's on them, anyhow?

John


be carefull, we had a drive and when we removed the cover and was in the
process of messing around with it the platter just shattered into a load of
shards, it was like glass. Sonds strange I know but thats exactly what it
was like

Paul
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doreme
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 3:49 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

"Paul Burke" <paul@scazon.com> wrote in message
news:373afuF59il66U3@individual.net...
Quote:
Mac wrote:


there is a
temperature above which magnetic materials become very free to realign
their magnetic polarity. This temperature is called the Curie
temperature
or Curie point, I think.


There are various Curie points, graded from korma to vindaloo.

Paul Burke

Think the Magdras point is what you need.
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Alan Turner
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 7:56 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

Hello,

On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 09:22:32 +0000, Paul ( Skiing8 ) wrote:

Quote:

be carefull, we had a drive and when we removed the cover and was in the
process of messing around with it the platter just shattered into a load of
shards, it was like glass. Sonds strange I know but thats exactly what it
was like

Paul

The platters on some newer hard disks are made of glass. I believe the
later IBM DeskStar* (tm) series were among the first to have glass
platters. I'm not sure what the advantage is to glass, but I'd certainly
like to take one apart and have a look!


* Sometimes referred to as "DeathStar" due to reliability issues. I've not
had any trouble with the DeskStar disks I've used. Lucky me!

Regards,
Alan

--
Alan R. Turner | Live never to be ashamed of anything you do or say.
To reply by email, remove Mr Blobby.
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Keith Williams
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 8:07 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

In article <cuhtl3$k7p$1$8302bc10@news.demon.co.uk>, "Paul \( Skiing8
\)" <skiing@dodgit.com> says...
Quote:
"John Larkin" <jjlarkin@highSNIPlandTHIStechPLEASEnology.com> wrote in
message news:1i2o01ldnhn3e5d2pu30hno7rpdkvep2ks@4ax.com...
On Thu, 10 Feb 2005 20:58:03 GMT, "Greysky"
greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it
into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed
to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me
a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were
wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping
data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it
inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you
think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for
the
kids. Thanks.


Just bend the platters a tiny bit.

What's on them, anyhow?

John


be carefull, we had a drive and when we removed the cover and was in the
process of messing around with it the platter just shattered into a load of
shards, it was like glass. Sonds strange I know but thats exactly what it
was like

Probably because that what it was.


http://www.hitachigst.com/hdd/library/whitepap/glassdisk/whiteglass.htm

--
Keith
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Al
Guest





Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 8:20 pm    Post subject: Re: Ways to *REALLY* erase a hard drive? Reply with quote

In article <vVPOd.2918$lz5.94@newssvr24.news.prodigy.net>,
"Greysky" <greyskynospam@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

Quote:
I recently had a 80 gig Maxtor hard drive die on me. Though it was still
under warranty (just) I decided a much better use for it was to turn it into
a show-and-tell for the local elementary school kids. I finally managed to
get the cover off the thing, exposing the inner platters. Someone told me a
Torx 10 would fit those crazy screws on the cover plate - they were wrong.
I had to drill them off. Now, I need to know a sure fire way of wiping data
off the platters for good. The machine died before I could erase it inside
the computer, so far I have a bunch of 'super magnets' which I dropped
directly onto the platters and let them stay there overnight. Do you think
this is enough? I would like to get them as deleted as I can possibly get
them, but still be able to use the drive as a demonstration device for the
kids. Thanks.



Years ago, when reel-to-reel tape recorders were popular, there was a
gadget called a bulk reel eraser. It completely wiped any information on
the tapes. In essence it was just a giant electromagent that ran on AC.
The fluctuating magnet field was suffiecient to totally erase the
information and not leave a magnetic bias on the magnetic medium. If you
can find one, you might be able to build one easily from a discarded
tranformer.

Yes, and most of the screws are Torx. But they are also held in with a
drop of some sort of glue to prevent their backing out. I've extracted
platters from dozens of drives which I got at our town's recycling
center. I do it mainly for the magnets. And the platters make neat
coasters for your drinks ;-)

Al
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