|  | Posted by Jeff Rife on 10/11/66 11:33 
NunYa Bidness (nunyabidness@nunyabidness.org) wrote in alt.video.dvd:>  That's silly.  Hard drives are made to be used in any orientation.
 
 Yes, they were, and they were made to be stored in any orientation, but
 the reality was that true long-term storage (e.g., 1-3 years) did cause
 older drives to have lubricants shift in such a way that startup wasn't
 possible without manual intervention (i.e., open the top and spin the
 disc...once you did that, the drives worked fine).
 
 In the same way, older drives that had been running for a very long time
 would often not restart if you shut them off and allowed them to cool
 down to room temperature fairly quickly (like by removing the drive from
 the 30-40°C case and placing it in a 20°C room with much better
 ventilation than the confined case).
 
 Both cases were caused by the design where the lubricants were distributed
 by the rotation of the drive.  Newer drives solve these issues, so you
 don't hear about the problem as much lately, but it was a severe problem
 with older drives (particularly the 5-1/4" models).
 
 --
 Jeff Rife |
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