Claims
- 1. A production method for minimizing the size and weight of a high-speed disk declassification motorized machine to as small as about 8 inches by 10 inches by 12 inches and as light as about 17 pounds, comprising the steps of:
(A) providing a housing of about 8 inches high, with a base of about 10 by 12 inches, and having an opening on a side into which a CD or split DVD disk may be inserted; (B) in the housing interior, securely disposing a system for capturing, positioning and ejecting a CD or split DVD, such that the capturing/positioning/ejecting system is secured to the housing base; (C) mechanically connecting to the capturing/positioning system, a system for disposing a patterned-surface cutter of length about 1.52 inches with the cutter parallel to and below where the disk will be held by the capturing/positioning/ejecting system for cutting, with the cutter length aligned with the disk exterior data band radial length; and (D) to the cutter, connecting a motor for rotating the cutter at 10,000-30,000 rpm.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the disk declassification machine outputs a verifiable center-ring-intact declassified CD or DVD disk.
- 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the disk capturing/positioning/ejection system comprises a platform of about 6 inches by 5½ inches for supporting the disk during high-speed cutting,
wherein the platform has a minimized cut-out section for the cutter under the disk to contact the disk data surface.
- 4. The method of claim 1, including (1) disposing a microswitch system comprising a microswitch with the microswitch positioned with respect to the opening into which the disk is inserted to detect entry of a disk into the housing; and (2) electrically connecting the microswitch to a timing circuit and disposing the timing circuit in the housing interior.
- 5. The method of claim 1, including disposing a motorized vacuum dust collection system in the housing interior, wherein the motorized vacuum dust collection system comprises a motor separate from the cutter motor.
- 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the motorized vacuum dust collection system comprises a dust collection bag connected to a vacuum system exhaust directed to vacuum dust from where the cutter contacts the disk.
- 7. The method of claim 6, wherein the capturing/positioning/ejecting system comprises a motorized pinch roller system wherein the pinch roller system comprises:
a pinch roller positioned above and in close contact with the disk, and a motor separate from the cutter motor and separate from the vacuum motor.
- 8. The method of claim 7, wherein the motorized pinch roller system further comprises a brush disposed above the pinch roller with the brushing end contacting the pinch roller.
- 9. The method of claim 6, including shaping and positioning a flake-capturing screen under the cutter and close to the cutter without contacting the cutter and also under the disk support, and to completely block access by flakes to the vacuum intake.
- 10. A DVD splitter system, comprising:
a housing with a circular nest of diameter only slightly larger than a DVD diameter, the nest having a height of about half the thickness of a DVD; and a blade attached to the housing.
- 11. The DVD splitter system of claim 10, including a writing marker.
- 12. The DVD splitter system of claim 10, including mechanical contact with a rotating-cutter-containing apparatus.
- 13. The DVD splitter system of claim 12, wherein the mechanical contact is detachable.
- 14. A method for security declassification of a disk having at least one interior information-bearing surface, comprising
lengthwise-splitting the to-be-split disk into a number of thinner split-disk fragments; and, contacting each interior surface of the split-disks with a rotating cutter having a patterned surface to provide a declassified disk surface.
- 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the to-be-split disk is a DVD, and the DVD is split into two DVD halves each of about ½ thickness of the to-be-split DVD.
- 16. The method of claim 14, wherein the cutter has a length equal to or about corresponding to an exterior data ring radial length of the disk.
- 17. The method of claim 15, including, before splitting the DVD, marking each exterior face of the to-be-split disk with a marking that directs contact of the split disk with the rotating cutter.
- 18. The method of claim 14, including contacting a batch of CDs and split-DVDs with the rotating cutter.
- 19. A high-security, high-speed DVD declassification machine, comprising:
a patterned-surface cutter; a motor connected to the cutter for rotating the patterned-surface cutter at 10,000-30,000 rpm; and a system for capturing and positioning a lengthwise split half-DVD to press the rotating patterned-surface cutter parallel to the DVD surface with the cutter length aligned with a disk exterior ring radial length for sweeping the disk external data surface.
- 20. The high-security DVD declassification machine of claim 19, including a cutter of length about corresponding to the exterior data ring radial length of a disk.
- 21. The high-security DVD declassification machine of claim 19, including a housing having disposed therein the cutter, with a DVD splitter device detachably contacting an exterior surface of the housing.
- 22. A digital versatile disk (DVD) comprising at least one interior surface onto which information has been recorded or is recordable, and including on an exterior of the DVD a marking directing entry of the DVD into a data destruction machine.
- 23. The DVD of claim 22, wherein the marking has been applied before information-recording onto the interior surface.
RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/516,934 filed Mar. 1, 2000 (pending).
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09516934 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Child |
09954271 |
Sep 2001 |
US |