The entire hard disk is mounted into a physical enclosure designed to protect it and
also keep its internal environment separated from the outside air. This is necessary
because of the requirement of keeping the internal environment free of dust and other
contamination that could get between the read/write heads and the platters over which they
float, and possibly lead to head crashes.
The bottom of the disk is often called the base casting, the name coming from
the manufacturing process used to create the single piece of aluminum from which it is
normally made. The drive mechanics are placed into the base casting, and another piece of
usually aluminum is placed on top to enclose the heads and platters. A rubber gasket is
placed between the base and cover to ensure a tight seal. On some drives, a metallic tape
seal is applied around the perimeter of the drive to fully enclose the drive. The exact
shape of the base and cover can vary significantly from drive to drive. Some models have
the base flat and the cover like a bowl that goes over the contents; some are the opposite
way.

|
Cover (left) and base casting (right) of a consumer-
grade IDE/ATA hard disk drive. All the components
have been removed to show the detail (except the
recirculating filter is still in place on the cover... Oops!
You can see a proper picture of that filter here.) |
The base and cover are attached using a number of small screws, usually around the
perimeter of the cover. Additional screws are also used in the middle of the cover; one to
stabilize the spindle motor shaft, and one to secure the axis of
the actuator assembly. Normally all of these are Torx
screws (star-shaped). The reason these screws are usually found on hard disks is that
screwdrivers for them are usually not found at your local hardware store--they
have to be special-ordered (as I discovered when illustrating this material.
) The
idea of course is to discourage tampering with the hard disk.
The entire contents of the base and cover chamber (including the platters, heads and
actuator components) are collectively called the head-disk assembly. You should
never open the assembly. If you do, you will quickly contaminate the heads and platters,
and eventually ruin the drive. (Some folks get a bit melodramatic about this, claiming the
drive will instantly die as soon as you try to run it with the cover off. That's not true,
but if you do open the drive's case it's just a matter of time.) You will also void the
warranty of the drive if you try to open it up, as the warning labels on the drive itself
will attest. In fact, it is common for the hard disk manufacturers to hide one or more of
the screws under a label saying "Warranty void if removed".
The logic board is normally mounted on the bottom of the base casting, exposed to the
outside. It is separated from the base casting using foam or other cushioning material. Of
course, the read/write heads must be linked somehow to the logic board. This is
accomplished either with a flexible ribbon cable that runs from the logic board through a
gasket and into the hard disk chamber, or a set of pins that goes through a hole in the
base casting, mating to a special connector inside the head-disk assembly that connects to
the heads.
Some manufacturers apply a coating to the inside of the base casting before assembling
the drive. The purpose of this coating is to seal in, against the walls of the casting,
any minute particles of dirt or metal that might be hiding in the casting and might later
dislodge and end up damaging the disk.
Next: Air Circulation and Air Filtration