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Preventing Static Damage to your Hard Drive

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010 | Author: OWC Angela

One of the more frequent question topics we get here at OWC revolve around anti-static precautions.Very often, it will read something like this:

“I purchased a Newer Technology Voyager, and I love it! But I am still unsure how I should be handling a bare hard drive. Should I have one of those Electrostatic Discharge wristbands? Can I hurt my drive by handling it?”

That’s an important question; if you’re going to be handling bare hard drives, you should do so properly. Simply put, electrostatic discharge (ESD) occurs when a charge on a hand or tool finds a path of lesser resistance for itself to “ground.” If this “path of lesser resistance” goes through the hard drive, damage to the drive can occur. So, you must either create an even lower-resistance path, or discharge built-up electrostatic charge prior to handling the drive.

Creating a lower-resistance path to ground is usually done with an ESD wristband. If you don’t have a wristband, you can discharge static in one of two ways:

  1. Touch a grounded metal object to remove any charge from your body.
  2. You can ground yourself with most computer models by touching the metal chassis inside the case. That is, provided the machine is turned off, plugged into a properly grounded outlet, and has a metal chassis. If the machine isn’t grounded, you’re actually causing the damaging discharge we’re trying to avoid on purpose.

There are two other things to keep in mind regarding handling bare hard drives.

  1. Always handle the drive on the side, never touch the printed circuit board
  2. All drives ship in an anti-static bag. You can both handle your drive with the anti-static bag and store your drive in it too.

When you take your drive out, store it in our NewerTech StoraDrive stackable anti-static cases.  They’re a great way to archive your hard drives, protect them from the elements—including static buildup—and keep them safe!

Of course, anti-static precautions should be taken any time you work on your computer or handle any bare internal computer components, like memory or PCIe cards. For more tips check out this article by OWC Michael.

Category: New @ OWC

Creating a Hard Drive Archive with the NewerTech Voyager

Monday, June 14th, 2010 | Author: OWC Angela

Many of us like to keep our pictures on our camera and our hard drive. But, what happens when your hard drive starts to get so full that you have no more room and you HAVE to start deleting something?

Often, the first place we start to look is in our ‘Pictures’ file. “Hmmm,” we think, “I definitely want to get rid of the picture of me with a double chin, and I don’t need this one of Uncle Dan or Aunt Louise!” By the time you are finished, you’ve deleted maybe 20 out of 500 pictures. Bummer! Still not enough room on that hard drive! What to do?

The best, most cost-effective way to archive your pictures is to save them to a hard drive. That’s where the NewerTech Voyager comes in! This handy little docking station, or ‘toaster’ as I like to call it, can take any laptop or desktop hard drive and turn it into a useful archive! The Voyager comes with three choices of interfaces:

This flexibility makes it ideal for professionals and high-end amateurs who are getting overwhelmed with images on their internal drives.

Is it safe?

One of the questions I get a lot is, “But I’m not supposed to handle a bare hard drive! What about static? Won’t dust be a problem? Won’t it overheat without a fan? What about grape jelly and spilled cokes!?” Article Continues…