Drive density breakthrough from Toshiba
Published: 17 Aug 2005 15:55 BST
Toshiba says it has become the first manufacturer to commercially release hard drives with perpendicular recording platters, an industry-wide innovation that greatly increases the amount of data a drive can hold.
The MK4007GAL 4.6cm drive packs 40GB on a single platter, which is the most for a 4.6cm diameter hard drive platter to date. The platters can hold 206Mb/mm². The drive can be found in Toshiba's Gigabeat F41 music player. Toshiba also makes drives for Apple's iPods.
Two configurations of the drive exist: a 40GB with one platter and a two-platter 80GB drive. Next year, perpendicular recording technology will appear in its 2.2cm diameter drives.
Perpendicular recording involves recording data in vertical, three-dimensional columns rather than in two dimensions on a plane. In a sense, this is akin to having people in a crowded city centre move from single family homes to high rises. Although the shift to perpendicular recording methods greatly increases the amount of data that can be stored in a small space, it has forced the drive industry to put extra work into developing disk media, new heads and new electronics.
Toshiba's margin of victory is likely to be short-lived. Every major manufacturer has announced plans for perpendicular drives. In June, Seagate unveiled a line of perpendicular drives that the company said would begin to ship later in the summer.
Hitachi also plans to come out with perpendicular drives this year, as well as an even more dense version of these types of drives in 2007.
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