So, I was just wondering, will there be any physical weight difference between 2 hard drives that are the same model, but one of them is full of data and the other one is completely empty?
So, I was just wondering, will there be any physical weight difference between 2 hard drives that are the same model, but one of them is full of data and the other one is completely empty?
Nope, because the data on the drive has no physical mass. It's just a bunch of 1s and 0s. I don't remember exactly how the data is stored, but I think that it's all electro-magnetically "printed" even though the surface of the disc in the hard drive is never physically touched.
Edit: This reminds me of a site that I kind of forgot about: http://computer.howstuffworks.com/hard-disk.htm I might go check this out myself because like I said, I'm having a hard time remembering the specifics!
I answer with a question: When you write data to HDD, do you add something concrete with its own physical mass to it?
Answer to both questions is no. The only difference in weight between two identical hard disks, one sealed in factory and weighed a minute after it was produced and the other on your computer full with data is the dust your HD has collected.
Kari
My Computer
Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP ENVY 17-1150eg
OS
Windows 10 Pro x64 EN-GB
CPU
1.6 GHz Intel Core i7-720QM Processor
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5850 Graphics
Sound Card
Beats sound system with integrated subwoofer
Monitor(s) Displays
17" laptop display, 22" LED and 32" Full HD TV through HDMI
Screen Resolution
1600*900 (1), 1920*1080 (2&3)
Hard Drives
Internal: 2 x 500 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
External: 2TB for backups, 3TB USB3 network drive for media
Cooling
As Envy runs a bit warm, I have it on a Cooler Master pad