Glossary – Maxtor 10K V User Manual
Page 247

GLOSSARY
Maxtor Atlas 10K V
G-11
S.M.A.R.T. – Self-Monitoring and Analysis 
Reporting Technology. The continual 
monitoring of the drive's operating condition 
with reports sent to the host computer. Similar 
to Maxtor's EWS (Early Warning System) used 
in some drives.
SOFT ERROR – A faulty data reading that 
does not recur if the same data is reread from the 
disk, or corrected by ECC. Usually caused by 
power fluctuations or noise spikes.
SOFT-SECTORED – Old time-based method 
of indicating the start of each sector on a disk. 
Soft-sectored drives require that location 
instructions be located in the data fields. (See 
also 
hard-sectored
.)
SPINDLE – The drive’s center shaft, on which 
the hard disks are mounted. A synchronized 
spindle is a shaft that allows two disks to spin 
simultaneously as a mirror image of each other, 
permitting redundant storage of data.
SPUTTER – A special method of coating the 
disk that results in a hard, smooth surface 
capable of storing data at a high density. Maxtor 
disk drives use sputtered thin film disks.
STEPPER – A type of motor that moves in 
discrete steps with each electrical pulse. Stepper 
were originally the most common type of 
actuator engine, since they can be geared to 
advance a read/write head one track per step. 
However, they are not as fast, reliable, or 
durable as the voice coil actuators found in 
Maxtor disk drives. (See also 
voice coil
.)
SUBSTRATE – The material underneath the 
magnetic coating of a disk. Common substrates 
include aluminum or magnesium alloys for hard 
drives, glass, for optical disks, and mylar for 
floppy disks.
SURFACE – The top or bottom side of a disk, 
which is coated with the magnetic material for 
recording data. On some drives one surface may 
be reserved for positioning information.
SYNCHRONOUS DATA TRANSFER – 
Data transfer that allows transfer of multiple 
blocks of data between request or 
acknowledgment signals, since request and 
acknowledgment signals need not be sent 
before and after each block. This method is 
faster than asynchronous data transfer.
T
TARGET – An SCSI device that performs an 
operation requested by an initiator.
TARGET ROUTINE – An I/O process 
directed to a target and not to a logical unit.
THIN FILM – A type of coating allowing very 
thin layers of magnetic material, used on hard 
disks and read/write heads. Hard disks with thin 
film surfaces can store greater amounts of data.
THIRD-STROKE SEEK – A method of 
evaluating the power requirements of a hard 
drive. It involves monitoring drive current 
while seeking to a selected track, waiting for 1/
2 a revolution, then seeking to a track that is 1/
3 of the total actuator stroke from the first. The 
seek/wait cycle is usually repeated three times.
TPI – Tracks Per Inch. The number of tracks 
written within each inch of disk’s surface, used 
as a measure of how closely the tracks are 
packed on a disk surface. Also known as track 
density.
TRACK – One of the many concentric 
magnetic circle patterns written on a disk 
surface as a guide for storing and reading data. 
Also known as 
channel
.
TRACK DENSITY – How closely the tracks 
are packed on a disk surface. The number is 
specified as tracks per inch (TPI).
TRACK-TO-TRACK SEEK TIME – The 
time required for the read/write heads to move 
to an adjacent track.
TRANSFER RATE – The rate at which the 
disk sends and receives data from the controller. 
The sustained transfer rate includes the time 
required for system processing, head switches 
and seeks, and accurately reflects the drive’s true 
performance. The burst mode transfer rate is a 
much higher figure that refers only to the 
movement of data directly into RAM.
TRUE – Refers to the logical-one (or
