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Head Crash !

A definition of a head crash: When the heads of a hard disk come into contact with the rotating platters.

This, in theory means that many modern hard disks suffer a 'head crash' every time the heads park. However, there is a difference between the parking event and a head crash. When a hard disk parks it's heads, a command is sent to the drive to move the head stack assembly over the parking zone on the platters. As the motor loses speed, the heads gently come to rest in this are - the 'Parking Zone'. This area on the platter has a special lubricant embedded within the coating so as to minimise the friction between the heads and platters so that no damage is caused to the heads.

What Happens During a Head Crash

When the hard drive motor is spinning at full speed and for some reason, the heads make physical contact with the platter. At the moment of impact, one of two things will happen

  1. No Platter Damage
    If the head crash is minor then the hard drive's shock detection systems will detect the sudden movement of the drive and attempt to move the heads to the 'safe zone' before any further physical damage occurs. Also, there are protective layers between the surface of the platter and the magnetic substrate that is hard enough to absorb the shock of a minor head crash therefore protecting the data. However, see the description for platter damage below as a head crash may have occurred but is not yet apparent. If you suspect this may be the case, power off the drive and contact a data recovery specialist.


  2. Platter Damage
    If the head crash damages the protective layers and the magnetic substrate becomes compromised. This can quickly deteriorate into a full blown crash as the dust and debris particles displaced from the protective coating can increase the chances of subsequent head crashes as the drive has now become internally contaminated with this debris of which some may settle on the platter or become 'airborne' within the drive during power up. This can explain why in some circumstances a drive will function perfectly after a head crash, but then later completely fail. If there is any doubt if a drive has suffered a head crash, turn the power off and contact us.

Damage caused by a head crash

The picture below shows typical damage caused when the heads come into contact with the platters of a spinning drive.

The platters from a working drive have a mirror finish. It can clearly be seen that the heads have caused severe damage to the platters particularly close to the motor spindle, where most of the wear has occurred. This is caused by the damaged heads grinding into the platter as the drive was spinning. Power cycling the drive exacerbates this problem as each time the drive is powered up, more damage is done.

Generally, this type of damage is not recoverable, because the damage extends into the data area on the platters. In some cases where there has been only a minor head crash, some data is recoverable.

Causes of a Head Crash

A head crash can be caused by a number of things some are listed below.

How Can I prevent a head crash

  1. Never move a computer while it is turned on
  2. When working on a computer use ESD safe procedures.
  3. Always make regular backups.

Eventually your hard disk will fail for one reason or another. My advice is backup your data, we back our main databases and accounts systems every 90 minutes and they are stored off-site. Every night, all of our servers are backup to tape.

See also the section on platters in our How is data stored on a hard disk section.

Free diagnosis, no data recovery, no fee

All data recovery work undertaken by MjM is under a Free diagnosis and a no recovery no-fee policy. If we can't recover your data, then there is no fee for you to pay.

If you have lost data or your drive has stopped working contact us now.