I don't believe there should be any contact to
make any "wear" affect
the head.? It may have been damaged if you're talking one of the heads
you cleaned up.? But heads should never really contact the drive on
these types of heads.
Thanks Jim: The problem was happening before I removed the head, and the
symptoms (ring of white dust on the disk) has been going on for awhile
so I don't think it was the cleaning that threw it out of alignment.
I took a set of watch calipers to the head this morning to see if I
could measure the head width front to back (where front is the part of
the head closest to the spindle and back is the part of the head
furthest). Without removing the head from the head arm it's tricky to
measure, but it's pretty clear that the ceramic on the rear of the head
is thicker than the ceramic on the front of the head.
Which would make sense if it was dragging, as the ceramic would be worn
down by the pressure of the arm spring pushing down more on the front
than back. Once the head is angled it probably will not fly.
The next question and the really fun one is if the magnetic bar and
loops that are embedded in the ceramic are above the level of the
ceramic head. Ceramic on disk would leave wear, but I'll bet that steel
of the magnet would carve a nice trench.
I'll try to take a picture this evening but in the meantime unless
someone says that a wedge shaped head is "normal" I'm flagging this one
as bad.
Thank you for the write-up below. Amazing stuff...
C
I haven't posted earlier, but I had the same head technology on
Microdata and Western Dynex drives.? Those had spring steel welded from
the frame that attaches the positioner and the wires run out to the head
via that arm.
The thing I had happen was that in fiddling with the head, and cleaning
it, one could flex the head mounting.? It was a very stiff probably
stainless steel, but I suspect in cleaning efforts early on when I was
working with the heads and drives I got hold of some which either I or
someone prior had over flexed.? The clearance is so small that I think
that tweek allows the head to look okay, but in actuality isn't flown in
the proper orientation to stay clear of the media.
I built a number of drives up from highly abused parts, and there were a
lot of them, so got to play back then and learn.? Huge numbers of media,
junk drives and the like.
Once I got new heads the problems vanished.? Never did get a reliable
way to ID a head as good, so I always had a non essential removable
platter I'd fit the heads to and fly them to see if they caused damage.
If not, I'd move them to the fixed disk on the bottom of the positioner,
and mount two more on the top that I'd vetted.? That saved the most
media and heads.
But unfortunately not good now days where media and heads are scarce,
since it risks the media and heads.
thanks
Jim