I use the platters like this as my primary long term storage solution. It just saves so much space without the large enclosures. /s
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You joke but early 90s we had exactly this with magneto optical drives
Ah yes. The famous write-only backup solution :D
Techno-shamanism! I made a dream-catcher made from some plates.
I made a wind chime once that I really loved. Had to dirty the plates because they could catch the sun well enough to vaporize your retinas
I heard they keep data corruption away.
No but now I know what to do with my old hard drive that failed :)
That's a funny looking Stanley cup.
What
No
Yes. The magnets are ridiculously strong. Several hold screen in place on my heat exchanger, to keep leaves and lawn debris at bay.
Haven’t figured out a good use for the platters, but skeet shooting has crossed my mind.
If you wind a 2 or 3 layer pancake coil the size of the platter out of 12 or 14AWG magnet wire and dump a couple kJ through it from a capacitor bank, the platter will launch into the air. Don't try it indoors unless you want a platter embedded in the ceiling.
Zombie apocalypse DIY railgun
I don't have the space to hoard garbage.
Nope, but now I wish i did
No, because I am worried the NSA may try to collate data from them. In fact, I zero-wipe, drill bit the drives in the platters and the PCB, and drop them off at e-waste for recycling.
Holy crap. I don’t, but after seeing that I think I’ll need to start
I used to make clocks with the platters and give them to friends and family. Michael's used to sell inexpensive clock mechanisms that looked really cool against the platter background. I haven't seen them lately, but I'm sure someone sells them online.
Macabre.
Yet also (bitter-)sweet, those drives gave everything they had for you, it's only right to honor their memory & remember them.
I just open the drives & put them on shelves.
I will keep the magnets if I ever get into this in the future, but not the platters. I'll just safely destroy them and dispose of them.
So far I only had 3 laptops and no desktops. I had 0 HDD failures, since I only ever had 3 of them so far.
The oldest one is more than 17 years old 80GB 2.5" Fujitsu HDD.
The magnets are fantastic for tool mounts since they’re so strong
That's funny, that's exactly the method I stored my cdRoms back in the day.
... I didn't but I guess I could start?
My daughter's drawings are held on my fridge with old HDD magnets.
I keep the magnets, but I shred the platters. 'cause magnets are cool.
I would take those and the adhesive rubber feet that you would get with switches and make coasters out of them to give away.
Both of my autistic kids love magents. I will pull them from old drives, car/pc speakers, or anything else that has them.
Curious about the age of the oldest one
I started collecting in probably 2007, so manufactured before that for sure.
Every time, without fail, though I haven't decided what I want to do with them yet.
A common public toilet till machine has a keyhole that looks like a coin slot. Turns out, HDD magnets are the perfect shape to fish out any coins mistakenly thrown in there.
In a distant post-apocalyptic future, the survivors will use hard drive platters as a currency.
I do that to my dead drives, but I’ve only had one fail that wasn’t an SSD. Moreso because the washers that separate the platters have a very satisfying ring to them that makes me keep them as a fidget toy.
I use the magnets to hold screws, it works great for that.
Unfortunately, SSDs have less interesting parts, so I just take them apart to destroy the chips after failure
The older IDE drives with the 5.25" platters and smaller ones make great wind chimes. The laptop ones are a bit .ore fragile due to thinner material. Years ago, we used to do this with a few of them.
I have like 30 old hard drives laying around and have been thinking about doing a cool art installation with them for a while.
Maybe shatter the platters to create a spiky landscape and epoxy them in, or something like that.
Any ideas?