If you have spent any time at all working with a
computer, then chances are good that you have used
a floppy disk at some point. The floppy
disk drive (FDD) was the primary means of adding
data to a computer until the CD-ROM
drive became popular. In fact, FDDs have been
an key component of most personal computers for
more than 20 years.
Basically, a floppy disk drive reads and writes
data to a small, circular piece of metal-coated
plastic similar to audio cassette tape. In this
edition of How
Stuff Works, you will learn more about
what is inside a floppy disk drive and how it
works. You will also find out some cool facts
about FDDs.
History of the Floppy
Disk Drive
The floppy disk drive (FDD) was invented
at IBM by Alan Shugart in 1967. The first floppy
drives used an 8-inch disk
(later called a "diskette" as it got smaller),
which evolved into the 5.25-inch disk that was
used on the first IBM Personal Computer in August
1981. The 5.25-inch disk held 360 kilobytes compared
to the 1.44 megabyte capacity of today's 3.5-inch
diskette.
The 5.25-inch disks were dubbed "floppy"
because the diskette packaging was a very flexible
plastic envelope, unlike the rigid case used
to hold today's 3.5-inch diskettes.
By the mid-1980s, the improved designs of the
read/write heads, along with improvements in the
magnetic recording media, led to the less-flexible,
3.5-inch, 1.44-megabyte (MB) capacity FDD in use
today. For a few years, computers had both FDD
sizes (3.5-inch and 5.25-inch). But by the mid-1990s,
the 5.25-inch version had fallen out of popularity,
partly because the diskette's recording surface
could easily become contaminated by fingerprints
through the open access area.
Parts of a Floppy
Disk Drive
Floppy Disk
Drive Terminology
- Floppy disk - Also called diskette.
The common size is 3.5 inches.
- Floppy disk drive - The electromechanical
device that reads and writes floppy disks.
- Track - Concentric ring of data
on a side of a disk.
- Sector - A subset of a track,
similar to wedge or a slice of pie.
|
The Disk
A floppy disk is a lot like a cassette
tape:
- Both use a thin plastic base material coated
with iron oxide. This oxide is a ferromagnetic
material, meaning that if you expose it to a
magnetic field it is permanently magnetized
by the field.
- Both can record information instantly.
- Both can be erased and reused many times.
- Both are very inexpensive and easy to use.
If you have ever used an audio cassette, you know
that it has one big disadvantage -- it is a sequential
device. The tape has a beginning and an end, and
to move the tape to another song later in the sequence
of songs on the tape you have to use the fast forward
and rewind buttons to find the start of the song,
since the tape heads are stationary. For a long
audio cassette tape it can take a minute or two
to rewind the whole tape, making it hard to find
a song in the middle of the tape.
A floppy disk, like a cassette tape, is made
from a thin piece of plastic coated with a magnetic
material on both sides. However, it is shaped
like a disk rather than a long thin ribbon. The
tracks are arranged in concentric rings
so that the software can jump from "file 1" to
"file 19" without having to fast forward through
files 2-18. The diskette spins like a record and
the heads move to the correct track, providing
what is known as direct access storage.

In the illustration above,
you can see how the disk is divided into
tracks (brown) and sectors (yellow).
|
The Drive
The major parts of a FDD include:
- Read/Write Heads: Located on both sides
of a diskette, they move together on the same
assembly. The heads
are not directly opposite each other in an effort
to prevent interaction between write operations
on each of the two media surfaces. The same
head is used for reading and writing, while
a second, wider head is used for erasing a track
just prior to it being written. This allows
the data to be written on a wider "clean slate,"
without interfering with the analog data on
an adjacent track.
- Drive Motor: A very small spindle motor
engages the metal hub at the center of the diskette,
spinning it at either 300 or 360 rotations per
minute (RPM).
- Stepper Motor: This motor makes a precise
number of stepped revolutions to move the read/write
head assembly to the proper track position.
The read/write head assembly is fastened to
the stepper motor shaft.
- Mechanical Frame: A system of levers
that opens the little protective window on the
diskette to allow the read/write heads to touch
the dual-sided diskette media. An external button
allows the diskette to be ejected, at which
point the spring-loaded protective window on
the diskette closes.
- Circuit Board: Contains all of the
electronics
to handle the data read from or written to the
diskette. It also controls the stepper-motor
control circuits used to move the read/write
heads to each track, as well as the movement
of the read/write heads toward the diskette
surface.
The read/write heads do not touch the diskette
media when the heads are traveling between tracks.
Electronic optics check for the presence of an
opening in the lower corner of a 3.5-inch diskette
(or a notch in the side of a 5.25-inch diskette)
to see if the user wants to prevent data from
being written on it.

Click on the picture to
see a brief video of a diskette being inserted.
Look for the silver, sliding door opening
up and the read/write heads being lowered
to the diskette surface. |

Read/write heads for each
side of the diskette |
Writing Data on a
Floppy Disk
The following is an overview of how a floppy disk
drive writes data to a floppy disk. Reading data
is very similar. Here's what happens:
- The computer program passes an instruction
to the computer hardware to write a data file
on a floppy disk, which is very similar to a
single platter in a hard
disk drive except that it is spinning much
slower, with far less capacity and slower access
time.
- The computer hardware and the floppy-disk-drive
controller start the motor in the diskette
drive to spin the floppy disk.
The disk has many concentric tracks on each
side. Each track is divided into smaller segments
called sectors, like slices of a pie.
- A second motor, called a stepper motor,
rotates a worm-gear shaft (a miniature
version of the worm gear in a bench-top vise)
in minute increments that match the spacing
between tracks.
The time it takes to get to the correct
track is called "access time." This stepping
action (partial revolutions) of the stepper
motor moves the read/write heads like the
jaws of a bench-top vise. The floppy-disk-drive
electronics know how many steps the motor
has to turn to move the read/write heads to
the correct track.
- The read/write heads stop at the track.
The read head checks the prewritten address
on the formatted diskette to be sure it is using
the correct side of the diskette and is at the
proper track. This operation is very similar
to the way a record player automatically goes
to a certain groove on a vinyl record.
- Before the data from the program is written
to the diskette, an erase coil (on the
same read/write head assembly) is energized
to "clear" a wide, "clean slate" sector prior
to writing the sector data with the write head.
The erased sector is wider than the written
sector -- this way, no signals from sectors
in adjacent tracks will interfere with the sector
in the track being written.
- The energized write head puts data on the
diskette by magnetizing minute, iron, bar-magnet
particles embedded in the diskette surface,
very similar to the technology used in the mag
stripe on the back of a credit
card. The magnetized particles have their
north and south poles oriented in such a way
that their pattern may be detected and read
on a subsequent read operation.
- The diskette stops spinning. The floppy
disk drive waits for the next command.
On a typical floppy disk drive, the small indicator
light stays on during all of the above operations.
Floppy Disk Drive
Facts
Here are some interesting things to note about
FDDs:
- Two floppy disks do not get corrupted if they
are stored together, due to the low level of
magnetism in each one.
- In your PC, there is a twist in the FDD data-ribbon
cable -- this twist tells the computer whether
the drive is an A-drive or a B-drive.
- Like many household appliances, there are
really no serviceable parts in today's FDDs.
This is because the cost of a new drive is considerably
less than the hourly rate typically charged
to disassemble and repair a drive.
- If you wish to redisplay the data on a diskette
drive after changing a diskette, you can simply
tap the F5 key (in most Windows applications).
- In the corner of every 3.5-inch diskette,
there is a small slider. If you uncover the
hole by moving the slider, you have protected
the data on the diskette from being written
over or erased.
- Floppy disks, while rarely used to distribute
software (as in the past), are still used in
these applications:
- in some Sony digital
cameras
- for software recovery after a system crash
or a virus
attack
- when data from one computer is needed
on a second computer and the two computers
are not networked
- in bootable diskettes used for updating
the BIOS
on a personal computer
- in high-density form, used in the popular
Zip drive