I use the platters like this as my primary long term storage solution. It just saves so much space without the large enclosures.
/s
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 made a DRAM catcher once.
I heard they keep data corruption away.
Oh wow!
This is cool, but honestly kind of a deranged question to ask.
Does anybody else harvest the teeth of their victims and put them on a keychain?
Or fashion bow ties from their testicles. . ?
Fair, my home office is a monument to too much free time, a hoarding habit for ewaste, and a wife who works weekends and overnights.
This is just a less gross version of "DAE store their piss in jars so they can commemorate their unitary secretions"?
baffled glance...wot?
Unhinged comment.
Thought it was just me. Used to have at least twice this many in my old office:
That's rad, and you did an amazing job keeping them whole. Recently I have been wrapping them in cloth, then the kids form clay around them for various fridge and office magnets.
That's a good idea. Yeah, the trick I discovered in getting them off the mounting bracket without the chrome plating peeling is to grab each end of the bracket with vice grips and/or pliers (after you unscrew it from the drive) and just bend it down and away from the magnet. They usually come off in one piece that way, too.
Cool, I'll try this next time. So far the least damaging way I've tried is putting the thing in hot water. The magnet and the base expand by different amounts and it is relatively easy to pry the magnet off. But the thing cools down quickly so it takes a few tries.
I've done some of that, recently I have an old putty knife and I will put it right against the crack and just hammer it which will unstick it enough that I can pull it off. Newer drives definitely have weaker magnets than some of my much older ones.
Wow it looks like a light sweeper
I was doing some blacksmithing in high school, mostly knifes.
When reaching 800°C steel is not magnetic anymore, it's also a good temperature to start forging the steel. So I needed a atrong magnet to know when the steel was hot enough, I used what I have available: a hard drive magnet.
It felt quite "mad-maxy" to disassemble a broken hard drive to use it as a tool to forge knifes
No but now I know what to do with my old hard drive that failed :)
That's a funny looking Stanley cup.
Dude's the Predator of the IT world
Pretty sure that title is firmly held by mcafe, even now.
What
I don't have the space to hoard garbage.
No
I use them as coffee mats...
I do that with save icons!
The 3.5s make for excellent coasters lol
How do you keep them from sticking onto cups
Good question, but I've not had that issue so far
I typically use yeti ramblers with a metal bases on them, though I've set ceramic mugs down on them too and they've not stuck. might depend on the drink a little?
Oh it's probably vacuum sealed then so it doesn't condensate
Maybe but I do spill a bit every now and then. Can't speak for the regular ceramic mugs, though that's a bit of a rarity and they just have herbal tea
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
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.
Nope, but now I wish i did
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.
That's very cool, do you have a picture of them?
Holy crap. I don’t, but after seeing that I think I’ll need to start
And here I thought I had a lot of hdd platter coaster's.
I have like 15 over the past decade and now I realize I am an ant to OP
I thought you made a custom thermos bottle at first
Same.
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 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?
As more of an artist than a techie for the most part — if you have your medium or at least part of it — the more interesting thing about art is what you have to say about it.
As an example, if you want to draw a distinction and comparison between the age of discovery and the age of technology, you could use the hard drives as a canvas on which to paint a portrait of something like Robert Scott / Lawrence Oates, or Jacques Cousteau, or Armstrong and Aldrin etc.
On that last one - if you could tie the size of the drive in comparison to the size of the code used in the moon landing that might also be interesting.
Anyway, all that to say - art is a mix of medium and message
Thanks for the artist view on things. :)
I mostly want something pretty to look at but adding a message to it is an excellent idea.
Their density makes them ring like a bell, if suspended by a wire through the center. Good wind chimes.
Will have to try that, also a good way to one-up my neighbor with those CDs hanging outside. :)
I use an old platter on my desk as a coaster.
Already have a few of those, always a good party gag for the ones that know.
If you have different types you could do an exploded view hardware showcase
Yes, I've got quite a few types, good idea.
Magnets, yes. Great for the fridge!
Just watch out for your fingers. Yeee-ouch.
I keep the magnets, but I shred the platters. 'cause magnets are cool.
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
Back in the day, I'd go through HDDs faster than systems-always needed to add storage before I could replace the CPU. I didn't start disassembling them until they got up to the 500 _M_B range, but you'd often get 3 platters back then. OP must be harvesting from a whole workgroup - I've only got a 3cm stack and 7 drives waiting for the screwdriver.
That's funny, that's exactly the method I stored my cdRoms back in the day.
Both of my autistic kids love magents. I will pull them from old drives, car/pc speakers, or anything else that has them.
I would take those and the adhesive rubber feet that you would get with switches and make coasters out of them to give away.
I've done this for years and it works great.
My daughter's drawings are held on my fridge with old HDD magnets.
... I didn't but I guess I could start?
Platters make good coasters
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
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.
Public toilet till machines - we don't have that in the US. Can you show a example - potentially even fishing out some coins? Super curious!
Here is a datasheet of one / photo. I don't have the video of me fishing coins, I probably deleted it because it was unwatchable (it's hard to fish coins while filming covertly!) but about 5 coins fit into the space behind the keyhole before they start being visible. The front panel is non-magnetic, unlike CZK coins, and the sound of fishing them out is very similar to throwing them in, so there is little suspicion unless you are at the wrong-gender toilet. Unfortunately, 10 CZK coins take effort to jam into the slot, so almost only coins up to 5 CZK ($0.25) get accidentally thrown in. Still, pays for my bus home.
Incredible! Thanks for sharing this. I now need to keep a look out when I visit Europe to see if I can attempt this.
They are also used as parking ticket machines (in Europe we don't have parking meters, you buy a ticket and display it on the dashboard, or in some places get a virtual ticket for your license plate). I don't think the company exports these outside the Czech Republic, and Euro coins are not magnetic. So I’m afraid you'll have to find another magnet-related exploit (maybe this)?
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 use old platters to hang around our chicken houses. The idea is to distract hawks and eagles with the sparkle as they spin in the breeze... Probably doesn't work, but I like the shiny disks :)
we do that around the veggie garden, but with aol cds.
Yeah I started with CDs but found they deteriorate relatively quickly ... :)
No, but you do, and I like this ob-jay-dar
I used to collect AOL cds. I had a stack a few feet high. I was going to make some sort of artwork out of them.
Yes. Got to admit mine just isn't as big as yours, though.
Challenge accepted. I'll post our collection tomorrow! I used some magnets to hold up a white board last week too. Hahaha
The mad god thrown of victory!
Nice : )
There's some really fun chemistry in the rare-earth magnets - I used to buy them in bulk to enlarge my own IT-workshop collection, which was mostly broken down for Nd salts. Also, the magnets from iMac screens were also plentiful when HDD magnets got small (and then went extinct).
I wish I got that many hard drives just so I could do this.
I use the old disks as costers
I've been lucky enough to not have a drive die on me yet.
I'm much more interested in your kit in the background.
That is a self-made soldering kit box I made when I was in college and had to haul it around a lot. I have actually been meeting to replace it with something more permanent now that I'm a grown up with my own house. I have an air flow soldering rig which doesn't really have a home, and I could have a much better use of space. I have my brocade ICX6610-24 next to that which I've been programming for way too long, and a whole bunch of 3D printer parts on top of that.
That kit box would actually be perfect for my needs as this is a hobby I only visit occasionally or when needed. It would be great to have something I can easily store.
Now I am feeling sorry I did not...
This man self-hosts
I havest them for the BlooDisk God Linuxathor, we are not the same.
Back in the day I bought a fridge freezer combo, second hand, no handles. Used to be a built in model. As handles I used two magnets from full height drives, they were ludicrously strong and shaped like a little bit like a handle.
Full height drives were 3.25" high for those who are wondering.
Stanley
What are they made of anyways?? Could one see any etching marks with a microscope?
Usually aluminium or glass. There's a metallic coating applied to the outside surfaces that stores the data. That layer is very thin though, so most of the material is the substrate.
They aren't etched
Bunch of tiny magnets either north or south.
I used to. Magnets on old hard drives were better. Any drive I've taken apart over the last ten years or so are smaller and more brittle. Not as worth taking apart.
That's amazing. Jaw dropping.
I thought I was cool for making a clock one time.
No but I wish I had been. 😑
I don't want to ruin your fun, but the last time I saw a post like this on reddit, the top comment was: "Don't open hard drives. They contain micro particles from wear and tear, that are as dangerous as asbestos."
If your hard drive has dust it would've failed a long time ago. They are designed to be extremely clean. The head is like a 747 flying an inch above the ground. It sounds like an urban myth to scare people.
I did a quick bit of research on this, and I wasn't really able to find anything to corroborate this. I'd be interested to know if there is a proper source to this though
The posting essentially says there is no risk than tosses out mercury and lead vapors which don't exist in a HDD. Then it talks about the lead in solder. You'd have to vigorously rub and handle the solder on circuit boards to get any amount on your skin worth worrying about and then you just wash your hands. That risk is true of all boards that don't use low or lead free solder. The whole comment is very hypothetical.
Unfortunately, I don't have a proper source. When I saw this post, the warning from reddit came to my mind and from the answers here I was surprised how many people open drives.
I assume, it is per hard drive such a negligible amount, that it could theoretically matter over a long time if you open a lot but that there is probably not a single medical proven case and the warning from reddit was overly cautious.
Hey, I just want to say you're a real one for actually coming back with the Reddit comment and even a source essentially debunking what you said. This is why I love Lemmy, thank you.
I have never seen any dust or particles, they are pristine looking inside and no film or anything when touching internals. But I did some checking, drives have an air filter to catch wear particles to preserve clean head to disc contact, so those micro particles are hopefully trapped in the filter, and the risk is super low because of the tiny amount available, compared to clouds of asbestos dust in a home reno.
If they were remotely any threat to human population it would of been banned.
Considering they're covered in toxic shit, nope.
I'm pretty sure that's not true. What do you think is on there?
They contain lead, as well as other harmful toxins. I did a bit of research and it seems unless you physically destroy the platters it shouldn't be an issue.
Still, I'd rather just not do something so useless and risk my health in the process.
A typical HDD design consists of a spindle that holds flat circular disks, called platters, which hold the recorded data. The platters are made from a non-magnetic material, usually aluminum alloy, glass, or ceramic. They are coated with a shallow layer of magnetic material typically 10–20 nm in depth, with an outer layer of carbon for protection.[46][47][48] For reference, a standard piece of copy paper is 0.07–0.18 mm (70,000–180,000 nm)[49] thick.
This comment suggests it may contain leaded solder.
I use them as a coaster for coffee. They shouldn't contain any lead. I guess that would be illegal at least in the EU. You can't even put lead in solder anymore, so I'm pretty sure you're not allowed to put it in HDDs.
I use the platters like this as my primary long term storage solution. It just saves so much space without the large enclosures. /s
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 made a DRAM catcher once.
I heard they keep data corruption away.
Oh wow!
This is cool, but honestly kind of a deranged question to ask.
Does anybody else harvest the teeth of their victims and put them on a keychain?
Or fashion bow ties from their testicles. . ?
Fair, my home office is a monument to too much free time, a hoarding habit for ewaste, and a wife who works weekends and overnights.
This is just a less gross version of "DAE store their piss in jars so they can commemorate their unitary secretions"?
baffled glance...wot?
Unhinged comment.
Thought it was just me. Used to have at least twice this many in my old office:
That's rad, and you did an amazing job keeping them whole. Recently I have been wrapping them in cloth, then the kids form clay around them for various fridge and office magnets.
That's a good idea. Yeah, the trick I discovered in getting them off the mounting bracket without the chrome plating peeling is to grab each end of the bracket with vice grips and/or pliers (after you unscrew it from the drive) and just bend it down and away from the magnet. They usually come off in one piece that way, too.
Cool, I'll try this next time. So far the least damaging way I've tried is putting the thing in hot water. The magnet and the base expand by different amounts and it is relatively easy to pry the magnet off. But the thing cools down quickly so it takes a few tries.
I've done some of that, recently I have an old putty knife and I will put it right against the crack and just hammer it which will unstick it enough that I can pull it off. Newer drives definitely have weaker magnets than some of my much older ones.
Wow it looks like a light sweeper
I was doing some blacksmithing in high school, mostly knifes.
When reaching 800°C steel is not magnetic anymore, it's also a good temperature to start forging the steel. So I needed a atrong magnet to know when the steel was hot enough, I used what I have available: a hard drive magnet.
It felt quite "mad-maxy" to disassemble a broken hard drive to use it as a tool to forge knifes
No but now I know what to do with my old hard drive that failed :)
That's a funny looking Stanley cup.
Dude's the Predator of the IT world
Pretty sure that title is firmly held by mcafe, even now.
What
I don't have the space to hoard garbage.
No
I use them as coffee mats...
I do that with save icons!
The 3.5s make for excellent coasters lol
How do you keep them from sticking onto cups
Good question, but I've not had that issue so far
I typically use yeti ramblers with a metal bases on them, though I've set ceramic mugs down on them too and they've not stuck. might depend on the drink a little?
Oh it's probably vacuum sealed then so it doesn't condensate
Maybe but I do spill a bit every now and then. Can't speak for the regular ceramic mugs, though that's a bit of a rarity and they just have herbal tea
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
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.
Nope, but now I wish i did
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.
That's very cool, do you have a picture of them?
Holy crap. I don’t, but after seeing that I think I’ll need to start
And here I thought I had a lot of hdd platter coaster's.
I have like 15 over the past decade and now I realize I am an ant to OP
I thought you made a custom thermos bottle at first
Same.
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 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?
As more of an artist than a techie for the most part — if you have your medium or at least part of it — the more interesting thing about art is what you have to say about it.
As an example, if you want to draw a distinction and comparison between the age of discovery and the age of technology, you could use the hard drives as a canvas on which to paint a portrait of something like Robert Scott / Lawrence Oates, or Jacques Cousteau, or Armstrong and Aldrin etc.
On that last one - if you could tie the size of the drive in comparison to the size of the code used in the moon landing that might also be interesting.
Anyway, all that to say - art is a mix of medium and message
Thanks for the artist view on things. :)
I mostly want something pretty to look at but adding a message to it is an excellent idea.
Their density makes them ring like a bell, if suspended by a wire through the center. Good wind chimes.
Will have to try that, also a good way to one-up my neighbor with those CDs hanging outside. :)
I use an old platter on my desk as a coaster.
Already have a few of those, always a good party gag for the ones that know.
If you have different types you could do an exploded view hardware showcase
Yes, I've got quite a few types, good idea.
Magnets, yes. Great for the fridge!
Just watch out for your fingers. Yeee-ouch.
I keep the magnets, but I shred the platters. 'cause magnets are cool.
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
Back in the day, I'd go through HDDs faster than systems-always needed to add storage before I could replace the CPU. I didn't start disassembling them until they got up to the 500 _M_B range, but you'd often get 3 platters back then. OP must be harvesting from a whole workgroup - I've only got a 3cm stack and 7 drives waiting for the screwdriver.
That's funny, that's exactly the method I stored my cdRoms back in the day.
Both of my autistic kids love magents. I will pull them from old drives, car/pc speakers, or anything else that has them.
I would take those and the adhesive rubber feet that you would get with switches and make coasters out of them to give away.
I've done this for years and it works great.
My daughter's drawings are held on my fridge with old HDD magnets.
... I didn't but I guess I could start?
Platters make good coasters
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
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.
Public toilet till machines - we don't have that in the US. Can you show a example - potentially even fishing out some coins? Super curious!
Here is a datasheet of one / photo. I don't have the video of me fishing coins, I probably deleted it because it was unwatchable (it's hard to fish coins while filming covertly!) but about 5 coins fit into the space behind the keyhole before they start being visible. The front panel is non-magnetic, unlike CZK coins, and the sound of fishing them out is very similar to throwing them in, so there is little suspicion unless you are at the wrong-gender toilet. Unfortunately, 10 CZK coins take effort to jam into the slot, so almost only coins up to 5 CZK ($0.25) get accidentally thrown in. Still, pays for my bus home.
Incredible! Thanks for sharing this. I now need to keep a look out when I visit Europe to see if I can attempt this.
They are also used as parking ticket machines (in Europe we don't have parking meters, you buy a ticket and display it on the dashboard, or in some places get a virtual ticket for your license plate). I don't think the company exports these outside the Czech Republic, and Euro coins are not magnetic. So I’m afraid you'll have to find another magnet-related exploit (maybe this)?
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
this
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
And the coins aren't magnetic
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 use old platters to hang around our chicken houses. The idea is to distract hawks and eagles with the sparkle as they spin in the breeze... Probably doesn't work, but I like the shiny disks :)
we do that around the veggie garden, but with aol cds.
Yeah I started with CDs but found they deteriorate relatively quickly ... :)
No, but you do, and I like this ob-jay-dar
I used to collect AOL cds. I had a stack a few feet high. I was going to make some sort of artwork out of them.
Yes. Got to admit mine just isn't as big as yours, though.
Challenge accepted. I'll post our collection tomorrow! I used some magnets to hold up a white board last week too. Hahaha
The mad god thrown of victory!
Nice : )
There's some really fun chemistry in the rare-earth magnets - I used to buy them in bulk to enlarge my own IT-workshop collection, which was mostly broken down for Nd salts. Also, the magnets from iMac screens were also plentiful when HDD magnets got small (and then went extinct).
I wish I got that many hard drives just so I could do this.
I use the old disks as costers
I've been lucky enough to not have a drive die on me yet.
I'm much more interested in your kit in the background.
That is a self-made soldering kit box I made when I was in college and had to haul it around a lot. I have actually been meeting to replace it with something more permanent now that I'm a grown up with my own house. I have an air flow soldering rig which doesn't really have a home, and I could have a much better use of space. I have my brocade ICX6610-24 next to that which I've been programming for way too long, and a whole bunch of 3D printer parts on top of that.
That kit box would actually be perfect for my needs as this is a hobby I only visit occasionally or when needed. It would be great to have something I can easily store.
Now I am feeling sorry I did not...
This man self-hosts
I havest them for the BlooDisk God Linuxathor, we are not the same.
Back in the day I bought a fridge freezer combo, second hand, no handles. Used to be a built in model. As handles I used two magnets from full height drives, they were ludicrously strong and shaped like a little bit like a handle.
Full height drives were 3.25" high for those who are wondering.
Stanley
What are they made of anyways?? Could one see any etching marks with a microscope?
Usually aluminium or glass. There's a metallic coating applied to the outside surfaces that stores the data. That layer is very thin though, so most of the material is the substrate.
They aren't etched
Bunch of tiny magnets either north or south.
I used to. Magnets on old hard drives were better. Any drive I've taken apart over the last ten years or so are smaller and more brittle. Not as worth taking apart.
That's amazing. Jaw dropping.
I thought I was cool for making a clock one time.
No but I wish I had been. 😑
I don't want to ruin your fun, but the last time I saw a post like this on reddit, the top comment was: "Don't open hard drives. They contain micro particles from wear and tear, that are as dangerous as asbestos."
Edit: I found the post and comment. The issue mentioned was the cobalt. https://www.reddit.com/r/pics/comments/17il3i3/comment/k6veo9c/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
Edit2: I went and searched a bit. This meta-analysis says they found no increased cancer risk for exposure to cobalt particles. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0273230021001288
If your hard drive has dust it would've failed a long time ago. They are designed to be extremely clean. The head is like a 747 flying an inch above the ground. It sounds like an urban myth to scare people.
I did a quick bit of research on this, and I wasn't really able to find anything to corroborate this. I'd be interested to know if there is a proper source to this though
Edit: there can be some concern for those metal particles, although this is no different for any metal dust by the looks of things https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/do-old-hard-drives-contain-toxic-materials.1623183/#post-11646780
The posting essentially says there is no risk than tosses out mercury and lead vapors which don't exist in a HDD. Then it talks about the lead in solder. You'd have to vigorously rub and handle the solder on circuit boards to get any amount on your skin worth worrying about and then you just wash your hands. That risk is true of all boards that don't use low or lead free solder. The whole comment is very hypothetical.
Unfortunately, I don't have a proper source. When I saw this post, the warning from reddit came to my mind and from the answers here I was surprised how many people open drives.
I assume, it is per hard drive such a negligible amount, that it could theoretically matter over a long time if you open a lot but that there is probably not a single medical proven case and the warning from reddit was overly cautious.
Edit: I found the post and comment. The issue mentioned was the cobalt. https://www.reddit.com/r/pics/comments/17il3i3/comment/k6veo9c/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
Edit2: I went and searched a bit. This meta-analysis says they found no increased cancer risk for exposure to cobalt particles. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0273230021001288
Hey, I just want to say you're a real one for actually coming back with the Reddit comment and even a source essentially debunking what you said. This is why I love Lemmy, thank you.
I have never seen any dust or particles, they are pristine looking inside and no film or anything when touching internals. But I did some checking, drives have an air filter to catch wear particles to preserve clean head to disc contact, so those micro particles are hopefully trapped in the filter, and the risk is super low because of the tiny amount available, compared to clouds of asbestos dust in a home reno.
If they were remotely any threat to human population it would of been banned.
Considering they're covered in toxic shit, nope.
I'm pretty sure that's not true. What do you think is on there?
They contain lead, as well as other harmful toxins. I did a bit of research and it seems unless you physically destroy the platters it shouldn't be an issue.
Still, I'd rather just not do something so useless and risk my health in the process.
Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive
This comment suggests it may contain leaded solder.
I use them as a coaster for coffee. They shouldn't contain any lead. I guess that would be illegal at least in the EU. You can't even put lead in solder anymore, so I'm pretty sure you're not allowed to put it in HDDs.
I use SSDs