Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 hard drive PCB

Buy Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 hard drive PCB(Printed Circuit Board) on HDDZone.com with low price, fast shipping and top-rated customer service! All kinds of Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 HDD PCB for your Data Recovery Needs!

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB ST31500341AS 100530756 RVE A
Name: ST31500341AS
Board Number: 100530756 RVE A
Main Controller IC: V723A
HDD Motor Combo IC: 100369972

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB ST3320613AS 100496208 V723A
Name: ST3320613AS
Board Number: 100496208
Main Controller IC: V723A
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6964BD

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB 100466824
Board Number: 100466824
Main Controller IC: TTB5501D
HDD Motor Combo IC: 100439116

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB 100475720
Board Number: 100475720
Main Controller IC: V523C/TTB5501D
HDD Motor Combo IC: 100369972

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB 100498535
Board Number: 100498535
Main Controller IC: LSI-B5504A/V723A
HDD Motor Combo IC: 100369972

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB 100512588 REV A
Board Number: 100512588 REV A
Main Controller IC: 100369972
HDD Motor Combo IC: LSI 5504A

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB ST3320613AS 100496208 lsi-B5504A
Name: ST3320613AS
Board Number: 100496208
Main Controller IC: lsi-B5504A
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6964BD

Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB ST3500320AS 100466725
Name: ST3500320AS
Board Number: 100466725
Main Controller IC: TTB5501C
HDD Motor Combo IC: 100369972

Seagate Barracuda11 PCB 100442000 REV A
Board Number: 100442000 REV A
Main Controller IC: TTB54081AD
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6960B

Note:

  • These are just PCB(Printed Circuit Boards), not the whole HDD(Hard Disk Drive).
  • All boards have been fully tested before shipment, no refund and exchange policy.
  • It is a buyer responsibility to know if the board is adequate for his hard drive model.
  • Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure. We cannot guarantee your drive to be repaired by replacing the board.

HDDZone.com: Seagate Hard Drive PCB

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Free Hard Drive Tools (Part I)

1. Hard Drive Capacity Restore Tool

License: Freeware
Author: Atola Technology
Operating System: MS Windows 2000/2003/XP
Hard Drives Supported: All hard drives
Version: 1.2

HDD Capacity Restore Tool allows you to restore factory capacity of all hard drives.
Sometimes you can use HDD Capacity Restore Tool to actually increase the capacity of a hard drive (if it was limited by the distributor; for example, Hewlett-Packard sometimes sells 80-GB hard drives but sets a 40-GB limit. You can restore the full 80-GB capacity in this case).

Download HDD Capacity Restore v1.2
Capacity restore guide

2. Partition Find and Mount

License: Freeware
Author: Atola Technology
Operating System: MS Windows 2000/2003/XP
File Systems Supported: NTFS all versions, FAT12 (floppy), FAT16, FAT32

Partition Find and Mount allows you to recover deleted partitions.
What’s special in Partition Find and Mount is that it allows you to mount lost partitions right into the system, so the operating system sees that lost partition like a good one. It also has the possibility to create and mount images of the entire hard drive or separate partitions.

Download Partition Find and Mount

3. Wipe Hard Drive Tool
License: Freeware
Author: HDDGURU.COM
Operating System: MS Windows 2000SP4/2003/XP
Hard Drives Supported: All hard drives
Version: 2.35 build 1178

HDD Wipe Tool is a freeware utility for low-level hard drive erasing.
•    Supported interfaces: S-ATA (SATA), IDE (E-IDE), SCSI, USB, FIREWIRE. Big drives (LBA-48) are supported.
•    The program also supports low-level erasing of FLASH cards using a card-reader.

HDD Wipe utility will erase and re-certify a SATA, IDE or SCSI hard disk drive with any size of up to 281 474 976 710 655 bytes. Work with USB and FIREWIRE external drive enclosures. Low-level erasing of Flash Cards is supported too.
HDD Wipe Tool will clear partitions, MBR, and every bit of user data. The data cannot be recovered after using this utility. The program utilizes Ultra-DMA transfers when possible.
WARNING: After running this free wipe tool, the whole disk surface will be fully erased. Therefore, data restoration will be impossible after using this utility!

Download HDDGURU HDD Wipe Tool ver.2.35 build 1178

4. Hard drive firmware update utility (Bootable CD ISO)
This utility, on the bootable CD, will then examine your system, detect all 2.5/1.8 inch hard drives installed, and then check the firmware revision of the drive. If required, it will prompt you to run the appropriate firmware update program for your drive.
Supported drives:
IBM DARA-2x, IBM DJSA-2x, IBM IC25NxATDA04, IBM IC25TxATDA05
IBM IC25NxATCS04, IBM IC25TxATCS05, IBM IC25NxATCS05

HITACHI DK2x7A-x, HITACHI DK2x8A-x, HITACHI DK2x9A-x
HITACHI DK23AA-x, HITACHI DK23BA-x,HITACHI DK23CA-x
HITACHI DK23DA-x, HITACHI DK23EA-x, HITACHI DK23FB-x
IBM/HITACHI IC25NxATMR04, HITACHI HTS54xM9AT, HITACHI HTS72xM9AT
HITACHI HTS42xM9AT, HITACHI HTS54xG9AT,HITACHI HTS7210xxG9AT00
HITACHI DK1xFA

TOSHIBA MKx09MAT, TOSHIBA MKx19GAX, TOSHIBA MKx26GAX
FUJITSU MHN2xAT, FUJITSU MHR2xAT, FUJITSU MHT2xAT
FUJITSU MHT2xAH

This package is compiled into an ISO format, which is compatible with CD writing software and writable to a CD-R or a CD-RW disc.
Any hard drive password must be removed prior to running this utility.

A written CD-R or CD-RW disc will be bootable. It will boot from your ThinkPad optical disc drive and run the update utility program.

Download Hard drive firmware update utility release FWHD41 (ISO image to burn a CD)

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Glossary of Samsung Hard Disk Drive (Letter B)

Bad Block/Sector
An area on the media that is damaged and thus not reliable (detected by ECC). Such areas are generally auto assigned to spare sectors

Binary
Means of storing data on media, using two digits, (i.e. 0 & 1)

Bit
Binary Digit (i.e. 0 or 1). The form in which computers process information

Block (also cluster)
A group of sectors accessed/stored as a logical unit

BIOS
(Basic Input/Output system, firmware that is permanently stored in the memory of the CPU). The BIOS ROM first performs test routines when a system is switched on. It searches for and loads the operating system from the disk and contains programs to access the system hardware

BPI
Bits per Inch, reflects Areal Density

Buffer
A part of the HDD which temporary stores data. The buffer compensates for a difference in data transfer rates and data processing rates

Byte
a number of bits, considered a unit (8 bits = 1 byte)

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Glossary of Samsung Hard Disk Drive (Letter A)

Acoustic Noise
The level of sound the drive produces while operating, the smaller the number,the better

Access
The level of sound the drive produces while operating, the smaller the number,the better

Access time
Access time measures the time lapsed between the access command and the point in time where the head is positioned to read or write a specific sector (address), measured in milliseconds (ms). (The access time for HDDs is a combination of seek time, controller overhead, and rotational latency, i.e. time taken for desired sector to rotate under head for access)

Actuator
The mechanism that moves the head(s) to the correct cylinder. It generally comprises of two parts; a rotary voice coil and head gimble assembly. The actuator arm houses the head at the tip of its arm

Address
Assigning certain areas of a disk to particular data

Areal Density
Bit density; Bits per Inch (BPI) x Tracks per Inch (TPI). This reflects how dense the data is stored on the media of the HDD

ATA-3
Fast ATA (E-IDE), PIO Mode 4, S.M.A.R.T., Simple password, more sophisticated power management

Atapi
ATA packet interface, a communications protocol which allows the electronic controllers for IDE hard disk drives to handle up to four devices, including CD-ROMs and tape drives and tape drive, Atapi devices plug into the IDE Interface

Ultra-ATA
Merge of ATA-3 and Atapi into one, Strong command overlap

Ultra-ATA
A new, even higher performance Ultra DMA (transfer rate of 66 MB/s)

AV
Audio Visual. AV drives denotes drivers modified to enhance transfer rate performance for specific applications

Average Latency
The average amount of time it takes for the drive to rotate to the correct address, so that the head can begin reading or writing in its desired location (is derived from the spindle speed)

AVI
Audio video interleaved. A standard system, form Microsoft, for integrating sound and vision for Windows into a single file for hard disk or CD-ROM

Average Seek Time
The average time for a head to seek the address, calculated over a large number of random seeks

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Glossary of Western Digital Hard Disk Drive (Letter V,W,Z)

Viterbi Detection
An algorithm used in read channel technology that detects an entire sequence of data bits at once and determines the most likely sequence of data bits by comparing an actual sequence of data bit samples with possible sequences of data bit samples to accurately detect data written to disk.

voice coil
An actuator motor. The force of a magnetic rotary voice coil produces a movement of the head that is proportionate to the force exerted by the coil.

WAN
Wide Area Network. A computer network that crosses metropolitan, regional, or national boundaries.

WD AV
The trade name for WD’s line of hard drives for audio/video applications.

WD AV-GP
Trade name for WD’s line of eco-friendly audio/video hard drives that deliver power savings as the primary attribute.

WD Backup™
Easy-to-use software for immediate and scheduled data backups and restoring of files.

WD Caviar®
The trade name for WD’s line of hard drives for desktop personal computers.

WD Caviar® Black™
Trade name for WD’s line of high performance desktop drives.

WD Caviar® Blue™
Trade name for WD’s line of desktop drives designed for everyday computing.

WD Caviar® Green™
Trade name for WD’s line of eco-friendly desktop hard drives that deliver power savings as the primary attribute.

WD Discovery™
WD software application that allows the host computer to find one or more WD network storage systems in the same network segment.

WD GreenPower Technology™
WD technology that yields lower operating temperatures for increased reliability and low acoustics for ultra-quiet PCs and external drives.

WD Passport®
The trade name for WD’s line of portable external hard drives.

WD Raptor®
The trade name for WD’s line of Enterprise hard drives.

WD Raptor® X
The trade name for WD’s line of Gamer hard drives.

WD RE
The trade name for WD’s line of RAID Edition desktop hard drives.

WD RE4
The trade name for WD’s line of RAID Edition "designed for Enterprise" desktop hard drives.

WD RE4-GP
Trade name for WD’s latest generation of eco-friendly enterprise hard drives that deliver power savings as the primary attribute.

WD Scorpio®
The trade name for WD’s line of 2.5-inch internal hard drives.

WD Scorpio® Black™
Trade name for WD’s line of high performance notebook drives.

WD Scorpio® Blue™
Trade name for WD’s line of notebook drives designed for everyday computing.

WD ShareSpace™
Trade name for WD’s 4-bay network storage system.

WD SmartWare™
WD’s easy-to-use backup and encryption software that visually presents data in a control center, providing peace of mind that precious photos, videos and files are securely protected.

WD Sync™
WD sychronization and encryption software.

WD VelociRaptor™
The trade name for WD’s line of 10,000 RPM, 2.5-inch enterprise hard drives.

WhisperDrive™
A WD acoustic technology that significantly reduces hard drive noise levels.

Winchester disk
The former code name for an early IBM hard disk model, sometimes still used to refer to the technology and design of most traditional hard drives.

Windows®
An operating system for desktop computers.

word
Two bytes that are processed together in a single operation.

workstation
A personal computer with exceptional capacity and performance capabilities for use mainly in engineering, design, and audiovisual applications, which demand immediate access to data and the ability to manipulate it in technically sophisticated ways.

write
The recording of flux reversals onto the magnetic surface of a disk.

write cache
High speed RAM used to buffer data transfers from a host to a hard drive.

write verify
A feature which verifies that data written to a disk is readable. Immediately after writing data to a disk, a drive with this feature verifies that it can read the data just written. If the drive is unable to read the data, it writes the data to another area of the disk and attempts to write verify again.

zoned recording
Increases the number of sectors on the outer tracks of a drive, since the circumference of outside tracks is greater. This type of recording affords more disk capacity, because there can be more sectors on larger outer tracks than would be possible if the number of sectors per track were constant for the whole drive.

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Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 Hard Drive PCB

Buy Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 hard drive PCB on HDDZone.com with low price, fast shipping and top-rated customer service! All kinds of Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 hard drive PCB for your Data Recovery and HDD Repair Needs!

Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 Hard Drive PCBSeagate Barracuda 12 PCB ST31000528AS 100535537
Name: ST31000528AS
Board Number: 100535537
Main Controller IC: V60131/B5502C20
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6968B
Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 Hard Drive PCBSeagate Barracuda 12 PCB 100535704
Board Number: 100535704
Main Controller IC: B5502C30
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6964BD
Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 Hard Drive PCBSeagate Barracuda 12 PCB ST31000528AS 100536501 REV A
Name: ST31000528AS
Board Number: 100536501 REV A
Main Controller IC: B5502C20/V60131
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6968B

Note:

  • These are just PCB(Printed Circuit Boards), not the whole HDD(Hard Disk Drive) .
  • All boards have been fully tested before shipment, no refund and exchange policy.
  • It is a buyer responsibility to know if the board is adequate for his hard drive model.
  • Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure. We cannot guarantee your drive to be repaired by replacing the board.

HDDZone.com: Seagate barracuda 7200.12 Hard Drive PCB

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Glossary of Western Digital Hard Disk Drive (Letter U)

Ultra ATA
A high-speed host data transfer feature that transfers data at up to 133 MB per second. See also Ultra DMA.

Ultra DMA
A protocol for transferring data between a hard drive through the bus to the computer’s RAM. Also known as Ultra ATA, Ultra ATA/66, Ultra ATA/100, and Ultra ATA/133.

Ultra/150 CQ
A technology that optimizes the sequence of data transfers from the host to the hard drive, providing increased data transfer efficiency and resulting in higher performance for enterprise applications.

uncorrectable error
An error that cannot be overcome using error detection and correction.

unformatted capacity
The total number of usable bytes on a disk, including the space that is required to record location, boundary definitions, and servo data. See also formatted capacity.

unrecoverable error
A read error that cannot be overcome by an ECC scheme or by re-reading data when host retries are enabled.

untagged queuing
The ability of a drive to receive a maximum of one input/output (I/O) process from each initiator.

upgrade
In hard drives, the replacement of a hard drive with one offering greater capacity or performance or both.

UPnP
Universal Plug n Play. A set of computer network protocols that simplify the implementation of networks in the home by allowing devices to connect seamlessly. See also protocol.

UPnP NAT traversal
Combines UPnP and NAT features.

UPS
Uninterruptable Power Supply. A standalone device that provides secondary power to connected equipment in the event of a power failure.

USB
Universal serial bus. A serial bus for connecting peripherals to a microcomputer. It connects external drives, printers, modems, mice, keyboards, etc., through a single, general-purpose port. It can automatically add and configure new devices without having to shut down and restart the system.

USB 2.0
Hi-Speed USB (USB 2.0) supports data transfer rates up to 480Mb/s. USB 2.0 is backward-compatible with USB 1.1. If you connect to a USB 1.1 device, data is transferred at USB 1.1 speed (up to 1.1 Mb/s).

USB 3.0
SuperSpeed USB (USB 3.0) supports data transfer rates of up to 5 Gb/s. USB 3.0 is backward-compatible with USB 2.0. If you connect to a USB 2.0 device, data is transferred at USB 2.0 speed (up to 480 Mb/s).

USB 3.0 HBA adapter
WD’s USB 3.0 PCI adapter card. Allows users to upgrade their PC to take advantage of the faster data transfer speeds available through the SuperSpeed USB 3.0 port.

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Glossary of Western Digital Hard Disk Drive (Letter T)

TB
Terabyte. One trillion bytes (1000 GB) of data.

TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A set of protocols for communication over interconnected networks. The standard for data transmission over networks.

TCQ
Tagged command queuing. Type of command queuing in which random reads and writes are intelligently ordered to read/write to/from the nearest disk sectors. Intelligently ordered (queued) commands avoid additional revolutions of the hard drive and greatly improve performance.

TFI
Thin-film inductive. A head technology using a thin-film inductive element to read and write data bits on the magnetic surface of a disk.

thin client architecture
A computer system in which data is stored centrally, with only limited storage capacity at its various points of use.

thin film
A coating deposited on a flat surface through a photolithographic process. Thin film is used on disk platters and read/write heads, as well as on the write elements of MR heads.

TLER
Time-limited error recovery. Technology that improves error handling coordination with RAID adapters and prevents drive fallout caused by lengthy error-recovery processes.

TLS
Transport Layer Security. Successor to SSL. See also SSL.

TPI
Tracks per inch. Also known as track density. The number of tracks written within each inch of a disk surface, used to measure how closely tracks are packed on a disk surface.

track
A concentric magnetic circle pattern on a disk surface used for storing and reading data.

track-to-track seek time
The time for a read/write head to move from one track to an adjacent track.

transfer rate
The rate at which a hard drive sends and receives data from a controller. Processing, head switches, and seeks must all be included in the transfer rate to accurately portray drive performance. The burst mode transfer rate is different from the transfer rate, as it refers only to the transfer of data into RAM.

triple interface
An external storage device with three interfaces available for connection to the computer.

TuMR
Tunneling magneto resistive (TuMR) heads. Next-generation head design that provides greater signal output which translates into greater signal to noise ratio, enabling higher storage densities.

two mirror mode
Mode available when four drives are installed in a device. In this mode, two independent RAID 1 volumes are created.

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Acronis True Image WD Edition Software

Acronis True Image WD Edition Software

Acronis True Image WD Edition Software helps you to completely clone your current system hard drive onto your new WD hard drive. Cloning makes an exact copy of your operating system, applications, data, preferences, and email settings. Everything will be present and operate exactly as it did on your old hard drive. Acronis True Image WD Edition now supports WD Advanced Format Drives and ensures that all partitions are optimally aligned.

Acronis True Image WD Edition Software Key Features:

  • Drive Cloning – Copies the source drive to a new WD drive, leaving all data on the source drive.
  • Drive Migration – Erase the source drive after the new WD drive has been imaged.
  • Drive Image Backup – The long-term usage of the Drive Kit software will be to provide full drive image backups of a source drive at any time. Backup drive images will be stored as a file, which can be copied to any direct attached drive, network attached storage drive or optical media (CD/DVD).
  • Drive Deployment – Enables users to prepare a WD drive so that selected folders or partitions can be excluded from the destination image.
  • Drive Image Recovery – The Recovery Manager enables users to restore a drive image from a direct or network attached drive. The Recovery Manager can also either erase just a portion of the drive to be used for the restored drive image, or all of the previous OS.
  • Create a Bootable Standalone Recovery Manager – With the Drive Kit software, users can create a bootable ISO image file, which contains the WD Drive Kit Standalone Recovery Manager software.
  • Recover a Drive Image from the Bootable Recovery Manager Software – The bootable Standalone Recovery Manager enables users to recover a drive image from either a CD/DVD drive, a direct attached drive, or a network attached drive.

Related Links:

  • Download Acronis True Image WD Edition Software
  • Acronis True Image WD Edition Software User Manual
  • Acronis True Image 2010

Supported Operating Systems: Windows XP/Vista/7

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Glossary of Western Digital Hard Disk Drive (Letter S)

S.M.A.R.T.
Self-monitoring, analysis, and reporting technology. A technology to assist users in preventing system down time due to hard drive failure; it attempts to predict hard drive failure before it occurs.

Safe Shutdown™
A WD-exclusive feature that ensures all data is transferred before shutting down the drive.

SAS
Serial Attached SCSI. A point-to-point serial interface that links controllers directly to hard drives. Unlike traditional parallel SCSI, SAS allows up to 128 devices of different sizes and types to be connected simultaneously with longer, thinner cables. SAS drives can also be hot-plugged.

SATA
Serial advanced technology attachment. A standard for connecting hard drives to computer systems, based on serial signaling technology. Its practical advantages over PATA (also known as EIDE) are longer and thinner cables for more efficient airflow within a form factor, fewer pin conductors for reduced electromagnetic interference, and lower signal voltage to minimize noise margin.

SCA-2
(Single Connector Attach) interface incorporates a grounding contact, blindmate connector, direct plug misalignment tolerance, The number of errors of a given type that occur when reading a specified number of bits. Protection, hot swap capability, and backplane connector options for SCSI devices. SCA-2 is commonly called the 80-pin SCSI connector.

SCAM
SCSI configure automatically. Allows users to attach SCSI devices without worrying about configuration options.

SCSI
Small computer system interface. An interface between a computer and peripheral controllers, commonly used in enterprise computing and Macintosh systems. Pronounced scuzzy.

SCSI device
A host computer adapter, peripheral controller, or intelligent peripheral that can be attached to a SCSI bus.

sector
A 512-byte packet of data. This is the smallest amount of data that can be read from or written to a drive from a host interface.

sector slipping
A technique used to push down defective sector sites during a format or reassignment operation to maintain sequential order of the data. Spares are located throughout the disk for this purpose.

SecureConnect™
WD’s SATA cable connection system designed to provide a stable, secure attachment between a hard drive and a cable.

SecurePark™
Parks the recording heads off the disk surface during spin up, spin down and when the drive is off. This ensures the recording head never touches the disk surface resulting in improved long term reliability due to less head wear and improved shock tolerance.

seek
The movement of read/write heads to a specified location. The actuator moves heads to the cylinder containing the track and sector of stored data.

seek time
A measure (in milliseconds) of how fast a hard drive can move its read/write heads to a specific location.

sequential access
The reading or writing of data in a sequential order as opposed to random access. Magnetic tape drives store data in sequential blocks.

server
A computer used primarily to store data, providing access to shared resources. Usually contains a network operating system.

servo burst
Provides positioning information to the actuator arm, found at equal intervals on each disk surface (embedded servo) or on an entire surface (dedicated servo).

share
A folder that can be used to organize and store files on a network storage system. Shares can be shared with everyone (public) or with selected users on your network (private).

Shock Guard™
WD technology to protect the drive mechanics and delicate platter surface from shocks, both when it’s in use and when it’s not.

ShockShield™
WD packaging that provides double protection from rough handling and static damage. A protective wrapping that consists of a static protection envelope securely packed inside a plastic case.

SilkStream™
WD AV feature that provides for smooth, continuous digital video playback of multiple simultaneous hard drive streams.

single-ended SCSI
The standard electrical interface for SCSI. Single-ended means an interface with one signal and one corresponding ground line for each SCSI signal. Used primarily in applications requiring cable lengths under 19 feet (6 meters).

Slave
The secondary drive in a dual-drive configuration.

SmartPower™
Intelligent drive management system that automatically powers a device on and off with the computer.

SMB
Server Message Block. File-sharing protocol for Windows platform that allows users to access shares through My Network Places. Mac OS X or later also supports the SMB protocol.

SMTP
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. Standard for transferring e-mail across the Internet.

soft error
An error that is not repeated when the same location is re-read.

soft reset
ATA reset type in which the drive resets the interface circuitry according to the Set Features command requirement.

soft sectored
A technique that allows a controller to determine the beginning of a sector by reading format information from a disk.

SoftSeek™
A WD algorithm used with WhisperDrive™ technology to deliver the quietest 2.5-inch hard drive on the market.

sound power
A value measured using 8-12 microphones which represents the sound level emitted from the entire hemispherical area surrounding the drive. Because sound power more closely corresponds to the sound level detected by the human ear, it is used as the industry standard for measuring hard drive acoustics.

sound pressure
A value representing the sound level emitted by a hard drive from a single point. Only one microphone is used to measure sound pressure.

spanned
Combination of drives in a linear fashion to create one large logical volume. A spanned drive is like a single, bigger drive, in that files written to the volume earlier go at the "beginning" of the volume, on the first physical drive. If one of the drives fails, all data is lost.

SPC
SCSI Primary Commands.

spindle
The center, rod-like axle on which disks are mounted.

spindle motor
A motor that rotates a spindle and ultimately the disks.

spindle speed
See RPM.

spindle synchronization
In multiple-drive systems, a feature that causes SCSI hard drives to rotate to the same address location at the same time.

SSA

SSC
Spread Spectrum Clocking. Feature that controls electromagnetic interference output in hard drives.

SSH
Secure Shell. A network protocol that uses encryption and authentication keys to enable two devices on the network to exchange data securely.

SSL
Secure Socket Layer. A protocol that provides authentication and encryption services between a web server and a web browser.

StableTrac™
The motor shaft of the hard drive is secured at both ends to reduce system-induced vibration and stabilize platters for accurate tracking during read and write operations.

storage capacity
The amount of data that can be stored on a hard drive.

streaming media
Media such as audio, video, and photos that are constantly received while being delivered by a streaming provider.

striping
The spread of data over multiple hard drives to improve performance. See also RAID 0.

structure-borne acoustics
When mounted in a digital device, the hard drive generates additional noise as a result of vibration. This type of noise, caused by the hard drive’s proximity to other system components, is referred to as structure-borne acoustics.

subsystem
A secondary or component part of a system, as a hard drive is a subsystem of a personal computer.

surface
The top or the bottom side of a platter coated with a magnetic material required to record data. A platter may use one or both surfaces to store data.

synchronous transmission
Transmission in which the sending and receiving devices operate continuously at the same frequency and are held in a desired phase relationship by a correction device.

system files
The files required to run an operating system.

system integrator
An independent professional who specifies and provides the necessary combinations of hardware and software in response to end user needs.

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