Title: Floppy Drive
1Floppy Drive
2Start with a non-magnetic platter.
Floppy Disk - Mylar Hard Disk - Metal, Ceramic,
or Glass
2
3Coat with a thin layer of magnetic material.
3
4Two important characteristics of the magnetic
surface
5Coercivity
- How strongly the material resists changing its
magnetic field. - Must be high enough to resist changes by
unintentional means. - Must be low enough so that excess write current
is not required. - Generally, larger drive capacities require higher
coercivity.
6Retentivity
- How well the magnetic material retains its
magnetic field. - Relates to how long a magnetic material can
retain data without degradation.
7Magnetic domains randomly arranged. (Blank media)
7
8Pick-up device - Read/Write Head
8
9Magnetic domains orderly arranged. (Recorded
Media)
9
10Reading Data from the Disk.
10
11Writing Data on a Blank Disk.
11
1212
13The disk surface is divided into tracks.
13
1414
15Side 1, Track 0
Side 2, Track 0
15
16Read\Write Head
Disk
Read\Write Head
16
17One Sector 512 Bytes
17
18SECTOR
- The smallest unit of storage on a disk.
- 512 bytes or 0.5 kbytes
- Grouped into clusters
19Most Hard Drives Have Multiple Platters.
Platter1, Track1
Platter2, Track1
Platter3, Track1
Platter4, Track1
19
20The eight track 1s are referred to collectively
as Cylinder 1.
20
21Read\Write Head
Platter
21
22Read\Write Head
Disk
Read/Write Head
2323
2424
25One Sector 512 Bytes
25
26Cluster
26
27Cluster
- The smallest unit of disk space that OS can
allocate to a file. - It consists of one or more sectors.
- Generally, the larger the disk drive the more
sectors per cluster.
28File Allocation Table (FAT)
- OSs road map to the disk drive.
- How OS keeps track of which clusters belong to
which files. - How OS keeps track of bad sectors.
- Two copies maintained and kept up to date by OS.
29Formatting
- Low Level Formatting - Performed by the Disk
Drive Manufacturer. - High Level Formatting - Performed by the PC User
via the FORMAT Command.
30Low-Level Formatting
Blank Disk
Sectors and tracks defined
30
31Low Level Formatting
- Performed at the factory.
- Converts the single blank surface into tracks and
sectors. - Finds and remaps bad spots on the disk so that
the operating system can avoid them.
32High Level Formatting
- Originally performed by the vendor of the
computer. - Creates Boot Record, FAT, and the Root Directory.
- Performed with the FORMAT Command.
33Partitioning
- Makes the hard disk compatible with the operating
system. - Prepares the hard disk for high-level format.
- Divides the hard disk into two or more partitions
or makes it all one large partition. - Performed with the FDISK command.