Alas they
don't :-(. I've heard the term 'track' used for hard drives
when they meant 'cylinders'. ARGH!!!
-tony
I thought you could only read/write to the top layer of the harddrive
platter, or do some drives allow writing to both sides?
Except for a ferw very odd ones (e.g. hard drives which record analagoue
singals such as analogue video [1]) every hard disk I've worked on has
used both sides of all platters for something. Maybe not user data
storage (for excample, it may contain servo information only), but there
will be a head on it.
[1[] Yes such things did exist. They were used for action replays on TV,
for exmaple. And somewhere I have a vido output system for the PDP11
which uses a special hard disk as its video memeory).
In the context of a hard disk, though, a 'cylinder' means all the tracks
that can be accessed without moving the heads. So if you have 4 data
surfaces (such as the ST412), a cylinder contains 4 tracks. In an RK07,
which has 3 data surfaces and 1 servo surface, as cylinder it 3 tracks.
And so on.
-tony