50Hz vs 60Hz fixed drive speed ?

From: Tom Uban <uban_at_ubanproductions.com>
Date: Tue Feb 17 15:57:37 2004

Well if you are talking about modern hard drives, then you are of course
correct. But then that wouldn't be on topic for this list. My question
revolves around the old vintage hard drives with fixed platters driven
by A/C motors.

--tom

At 03:13 PM 2/17/2004 -0600, you wrote:

>Hard drives are almost always driven by a DC motor (off the +12v line).
>There is a speed servo thatt derrives its proper feedback from the servo
>information formatted into the disk. Remember the only AC in a PC today
>is the input bridge/caps that makes the DC voltage that the switch
>transistor or FET turns into AC for the power transformer. That is how
>they do autoranging, and they will work with just about any kind of input
>AC.
>
>The only problesm you have with 60 vs 50 Hz power is with synchronous
>motors. This is a BIG problem with Hammond tonewheel organs shipped from
>the US overseas to 50 Hz power.
>
>Gary Hildebrand
>St. Joseph, MO
>
>
> > A friend and I were discussing 8" floppy drives recently, in particular
> > that they often have two pulley sizes so that the rotational speed is
> > 360rpm regardless of 50Hz or 60Hz operation, assuming that they are
> > setup properly.
> >
> > The question then turned to whether or not a fixed hard drive would
> > typically be designed in a similar fashion, such that the spindle
> > would rotate at the same number of RPM when configured for 50Hz or
> > 60Hz operation, or if they did not worry about the speed differences
> > as the media was not removable?
> >
> > Of course todays modern hard drives are driven with DC motors, so
> > they are not affected by the A/C frequency differences.
> >
> > Does anyone know what manufacturers routinely did on this account?
> >
> > --tnx
> > --tom
> >
> >
Received on Tue Feb 17 2004 - 15:57:37 GMT

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