Claims
- 1. A method of compensating for variation in timing skew in a storage device, the method comprising:
(a) computing at least two timing skew values for corresponding sectors; and (b) utilizing data related to the timing skew values to compensate for timing skew variation.
- 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the utilizing data step (b) further comprising generating at least one timing mark search window as a function of the data related to the timing skew values to thereby detect at least one timing mark on a disc surface during a head switch operation.
- 3. The method of claim 1 further comprising storing the timing skew values in a memory.
- 4. The method of claim 1 further comprising storing radially-dependent timing coefficients related to the timing skew values in a memory.
- 5. The method of claim 4 wherein the radially-dependent timing coefficients related to the timing skew values are determined from a calibration procedure.
- 6. The method of claim 5 wherein the calibration procedure is a factory calibration procedure that is carried out during manufacture of the disc drive.
- 7. The method of claim 5 wherein the calibration procedure is a start-up calibration procedure that is carried out during initial startup of the disc drive.
- 8. The method of claim 5 wherein the calibration procedure is a refined calibration procedure that is carried out subsequent to the initial start-up of the disc drive.
- 9. A storage device comprising:
a timing control system adapted to compensate for variation in timing skew by:
computing at least two timing skew values for corresponding sectors; and utilizing data related to the timing skew values to compensate for timing skew variation.
- 10. The disc drive of claim 9 wherein the timing control system is further adapted to utilize data related to the timing skew values by generating at least one timing mark search window as a function of the data related to the timing skew values to thereby detect at least one timing mark on a disc surface during a head switch operation.
- 11. The disc drive of claim 9 wherein the timing control system is further adapted to store the timing skew values in a non-volatile memory.
- 12. The disc drive of claim 9 wherein the timing control system is further adapted to store radially-dependent timing coefficients related to the timing skew values in a non-volatile memory.
- 13. The disc drive of claim 12 wherein the timing control system is further adapted to determine the radially-dependent timing coefficients from a calibration procedure.
- 14. The disc drive of claim 13 wherein the calibration procedure is a factory calibration procedure that is carried out during manufacture of the disc drive and wherein the timing control system is adapted to determine the radially-dependent timing coefficients from the factory calibration procedure.
- 15. The apparatus of claim 13 wherein the calibration procedure is a start-up calibration procedure that is carried out during initial startup of the disc drive and wherein the timing control system is adapted to determine the radially-dependent timing coefficients from the start-up calibration procedure.
- 16. The apparatus of claim 13 wherein the calibration procedure is a refined calibration procedure that is carried out subsequent to the initial start-up of the disc drive and wherein the timing control system is adapted to determine the radially-dependent timing coefficients from the refined calibration procedure.
- 17. The disc drive of claim 9 wherein the timing control system comprises a timing mark search window generation circuit and a timing mark detection circuit.
- 18. A disc drive comprising:
at least one rotatable disc with a first head position over a first disc surface of the at least one rotatble disc and a second head positioned over a second disc surface of the at least one rotatable disc, the first disc surface including a track having a first plurality of sectors and the second disc surface including a track having a second plurality of sectors, each sector of the second plurality of sectors corresponding to a different sector of the first plurality of sectors, thereby forming a plurality of pairs of corresponding sectors; and a timing skew control means for compensating for variation in timing skew values in the disc drive.
- 19. The disc drive of claim 18 wherein the timing skew control means comprises a timing control system adapted to compensate for variation in timing skew by:
computing a timing skew value for each pair of corresponding sectors to obtain a sequence of timing skew values; and utilizing data related to the sequence of timing skew values to compensate for timing skew variation.
- 20. The disc drive of claim 19 wherein the timing skew control system is further adapted to utilize the data related to the sequence of timing skew values by generating at least one timing mark search window as a function of the data related to the sequence of timing skew values to thereby detect at least one timing mark on the second disc surface during a head switch operation from the first head positioned over the first disc surface to the second head positioned over the second disc surface.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application 60/401,100 filed on Aug. 5, 2002 for inventors Reed D. Hanson and Timothy F. Ellis and entitled “COMPENSATION FOR HEAD-TO-HEAD TIMING VARIATION ARISING IN MULTI-DISK DRIVES HAVING PREWRITTEN MEDIA.”
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60401100 |
Aug 2002 |
US |