Disposing of hard drive

Which is kind of like carefully erasing a whole notebook (the bound paper kind) before you shred and burn it.

Concur that there’s no need to use a digital wipe unless you’re going to give away the drive as a usable item, or are an Anonymous element.

If you stick a drive into a microwave you’ll fry the controller board but the microwaves won’t penetrate into the case and the platters will still be intact.

Open the case up first and you’ll totally fry the platters. But if you are going to open up the case you can just as easily smash the platters with a hammer at that point.

I haven’t watched the video so I don’t know what they did.

I’d go for physical destruction myself, as I’ve treated drives pretty badly and they’ve still worked fine, no way I’d trust a tap or two or do the job, not that I’ve got anything to hide… Although, I do have a degaussing wand around here somewhere…

I agree 100%. I use DBAN often on drives before discarding them. There is always paranoid talk about recovery, but so far no one has demonstrated they can recover anything from a hard disk successfully wiped by DBAN.

Yeah, if you had the fate of the free world riding on it, physically destroy the disk sounds reasonable.

As a precaution, we try to take failing drives out of service before they completely die so that DBAN can be run on them before they are discarded.

For those that don’t know about DBAN, it is free and can be downloaded and it works on PCs and I believe there is a version of it for the Mac. However, if you remove the hard disk, you can put it in a PC or install it in a hard disk enclosure and run it off a PC to wipe it if you prefer DBAN run from a PC.

I shoot them, which also gives me an excuse to go shooting. :slight_smile:

But a drill or hammer will work as well. You are trying to crush or damage the platters inside.

We had two old towers we needed to junk; an old Dell and an IBM with XP.

To make tedious story short; we called Waste Management and they told us we had to take them to someplace in northern California which, according to Google, is 11 hours away!

The magnets are fun.

The hardware may have been manufactured by Seagate, but it’s possible that Glyph wrote their own firmware and did their own testing, which could be better than Seagate’s (or it could be worse). Glyph claims to offer an “industry best” warranty, so it’s possible that you’re just paying more for the warranty, or it’s possible that they really have found a way to make drives more reliable, and thus can offer a better warranty because their drives don’t die. Or it’s possible it’s all marketing nonsense.

California has mandatory e-waste recycling. There should be a place in your city or county that handles this, maybe more than one place.

Thanks for the info.