The instant nonprovisional patent application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2006-309347 filed Nov. 15, 2006 and which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein for all purposes.
In general, as described in Japanese Patent Publication No. 2004-5783 (“Patent document 1”) and Japanese Patent Publication No. 2006-79745 (“Patent document 2”), magnetic disk drives may be constructed in the following manner. A spindle motor for rotating magnetic disks which are supported by a rotary shaft and suspensions which hold magnetic heads for recording and reproducing magnetic information on and from the magnetic disks are supported by a lunch-box-shaped (i.e., concave) base. An access mechanism for moving each magnetic head in the radial direction of the magnetic disk via the suspension and positioning it is put in the base. The opening of the base is covered with a flat-plate-like cover, and the cover is fixed to the side wall of the base with bolts at the four corners and side positions. A tightly closed case is thus formed.
Magnetic disk drives are typically used as external storage devices of computer systems, and their uses are expanding to audio-visual (AV) apparatuses such as image data recording apparatus. As such, magnetic disk drives are now required to be increased in recording density and capacity. To increase the recording density and the capacity, the linear recording density is increased by shortening the distance between each magnetic head and the associated magnetic disk, that is, the flying amount of each magnetic head and, at the same time, the track density is increased by narrowing the recording track width of the magnetic disks.
In current magnetic disk drives, from the viewpoints of workability and cost, the base is usually formed by aluminum die casting. Particularly in stationary magnetic disk drives to secure necessary levels of silence and rigidity, the cover is usually made of stainless steel or iron. Particularly in recent years, since magnetic disk drives have come to be used more often in AV apparatus, higher levels of silence and rigidity have come to be required. As a result, stainless steel and iron are now becoming mainstream materials of the cover.
Since the linear coefficient of thermal expansion of aluminum is larger than that of each of stainless steel and iron, forces occur in the contact portions where the cover is fixed to the base when the temperature is varied. For example, when the temperature is increased, the amount of elongation of the aluminum base is larger than that of the cover made of stainless steel or iron. Therefore, resulting deformation is such that the cover restricts the elongation of the base. As a result, forces of restricting the elongation of the base occur at the base-cover connecting portions. Such forces of restricting the deformation of the base will be hereinafter referred to as “restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation.”
There are few problems as long as the restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation are weaker than the fastening forces of the bolts which fix the cover to the base. However, if restricting force is stronger than the corresponding fastening force, a slight displacement occurs at the fastening portion. At this time, the temperature-variation-induced strain in the base and the cover is freed instantaneously, whereby slight dislocations occur instantaneously in the access mechanism and the magnetic disks which are contained in the base.
In magnetic disk drives, a positioning control of a magnetic head with respect to a prescribed recording track on the associated magnetic disk is performed usually. Temperature-variation-induced deformation that causes no displacement at any fastening portion raises no problems. However, if a displacement occurs at a fastening portion, a positional displacement occurs instantaneously between a magnetic head and a target track and a positioning control cannot follow it. This results in problems that the read time increases in the case of reproduction and recording is performed erroneously on a track that is adjacent to a target track in the case of recording. The latter phenomenon means destruction of already recorded information.
Particularly in recent magnetic disk drives, the recording track width is very small because of increase in track density, as a result of which a positional displacement is prone to occur between a recording head and a recording track. This is becoming a very serious problem because it means reduction in the reliability of the recording and reproduction of magnetic disk drives.
Embodiments in accordance with the present invention realize a highly reliable magnetic disk drive by preventing a positional displacement between a magnetic head and a target track by decreasing restricting forces that a cover exerts on a base when the temperature is increased. According to the particular embodiment of
Embodiments of the present invention relate to a magnetic disk drive. More specifically, embodiments of the invention relate to the reliability of a magnetic disk drive at the occurrence of a temperature change amount.
Embodiments of the present invention have been made to solve the above problems, and an object of embodiments of the invention is therefore to realize a highly reliable magnetic disk drive by preventing a positional displacement between a magnetic head and a target track by decreasing restricting forces that the cover exerts on the base when the temperature is varied.
To attain the above object, embodiments of the invention provide a magnetic disk drive having a base which has a concave, rectangular parallelepiped shape and contains a magnetic recording/reproducing unit and a flat-plate-like cover which is smaller in the linear coefficient of thermal expansion than the base and fixed to an opening-side portion of the base, characterized in that corner portions of the cover that are fixed to the base with bolts or the like are lower in rigidity than the portion of the cover other than its corner portions.
More specifically, a base which has a rectangular, parallelepiped shape and is formed with step portions at the corners and a flat-plate-like cover which is formed with step portions at the corners are used. After a magnetic recording/reproducing unit is put in the base, the base is covered with the cover and the step portions of the cover are fixed to the step portions of the base under the latter. Where the cover is generally planar, the cover is deformed (expanded or contracted) like a plane is done when the temperature is varied, as a result of which strong restricting forces occur in the portions where the cover is fastened to the base. However, with the above configuration, the cover can be deformed flexibly because bending deformations occur in the step portions of the cover. The restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation are thus reduced. As a result, displacements are not prone to occur in the base-cover fastening portions even when the temperature is varied. A highly reliable magnetic disk drive can thus be realized.
Where each of the step portions of the cover is formed by bending a plate approximately along straight lines, bending deformations easily occur in the step portions of the cover. As a result, the restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation can further be reduced.
Where the plural step portions of the cover are independent of each other, bending deformations easily occur in the step portions of the cover. As a result, the restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation can further be reduced.
Another configuration is such that one or plural holes are formed in the vicinity of each of screw holes that are formed in the cover at the corners. In this case, the corner portions of the cover can be made lower in rigidity than the portion other than the corner portions. Therefore, when the temperature is increased, the corner portions are deformed flexibly and hence the forces of restricting the elongation of the base can be reduced.
According to embodiments of the invention, restricting forces that the cover exerts on the base when the temperature is varied can be reduced, which prevents a positional displacement between a magnetic head and a target track. As such, embodiments of the invention make it possible to realize a highly reliable magnetic disk drive.
First, a description will be made of deformation of the base which is caused by the cover's restricting expansion of the base when the environment temperature of a magnetic disk drive is increased, as well as forces that occur resultingly in connecting portions of the base and the cover.
Embodiments of the invention are intended to prevent a displacement from occurring in base-cover fastening portions due to the difference between the linear coefficient of thermal expansion of the base and the cover. Magnetic disk drives according to embodiments of the invention will be hereinafter described in detail with reference to the drawings.
A cover 7 is a flat plate of stainless steel or iron. Four corner portions of the cover 7 are bent at the four corners so as to form step portions 11. The step portions 11 of the cover 7 correspond to the respective step portions 10 of the base 6. To fix the cover 7 to the base 6, the step portions 11 of the cover 7 are placed on the step portions 10 of the base 6 and the step portions 10 and 11 are fastened to each other with bolts 8 at the four corners and two side positions (six positions in total). In doing so, the sealing performance is enhanced by inserting a gasket 9. Since the gasket 9 is a member like a rubber packing, it is necessary to press the gasket 9 with the flat portions of the base 6 and the cover 7. To this end, as shown in
The base 6 having the step portions 10 can be formed by forming a mold which conforms to it or cutting away corner portions of a cast base. The cover 7 can be formed by pressing a flat plate of stainless steel or iron. The step portions 11 of the cover 7 are formed by bending each of four corner portions of a flat plate two times approximately along straight lines. More specifically, each of four corner portions of a flat plate is bent along a straight line to form a planar cover step side wall 12 and a tip portion of the cover step side wall 12 is then bent outward along a straight line.
In the configuration of the embodiment shown in
In contrast to the comparative example in which the cover is generally planar, in the embodiments of the invention, since as described above, the step portions 11 are formed by bending at the four corners of the cover 7, at the occurrence of a temperature increase the cover step side walls 12 are deformed flexibly and hence the restricting forces can be made very weak. Since the cover step side walls 12 being planar can be deformed flexibly, it is desirable that the cover step portions 11 be bent along straight lines as shown in
Next, a second embodiment will be described with reference to
Also in the configuration of the second embodiment, the rigidity of the cover 15 is low at the four corners. Therefore, when the temperature is increased, the four corner portions are deformed flexibly and hence the forces of restricting the expansion of the base 20 can be made very weak. This makes it possible to prevent displacements from occurring at the fastening portions of the base 20 and the cover 15. Therefore, an instantaneous positional displacement between a magnetic head and a target track on the magnetic disk can be prevented. The reliability of the magnetic disk drive can thus be increased.
Although in the second embodiment the holes 17 are formed in the cover 15 at the four corners, the invention is not limited to such a case. The effect of reducing the restricting forces occurring at the time of temperature variation can be attained by forming the holes 17 at least at three corners.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-309347 | Nov 2006 | JP | national |