Are Airport X-Rays Harmful To Certain Hard Drives?
An Anonymous Coward wishes to put this curious query before you all: "I have been through the airport many many times w/ my laptop and have never had any problems w/ losing my data on my 2.5" hard drive, but two work associates of mine have not had the same good fortune: they had both traveled and brought their destkop 3.5" drives with them and had their data compromised/destroyed as a result of having had them go through the standard carry-on luggage x-ray machine. The drives were not defective mechanically before having gone through just to clear up any misconceptions. Were these just fluke incidents or does the x-ray system @ airports actually destroy data on certain types of hard drives? Let's hear your opinions!" Any thoughts on this? Personally, I would think that desktop HDs would be more sensitive to the shocks and bumps inherent in travel than the X-ray machines at the airport.
Actually, it's much, much more likely that the x-ray machine is not the culprit at all. Remember that hard drives are magnetic in nature. X-rays are no more magnetically charged than the light from the light bulbs in your house. X-rays will erase highly sensitive photographic film, but that's about the sum total of damage that they could ever do to any of your stuff.
However, in close proximity to the X-ray machine is a device that makes use of strong magnetic fields: the metal detector. Carrying a laptop though one would almost certainly mess with the data on it (note that it wouldn't totally wipe the drive beyond recovery. If you think it'd do that, put down the Neal Stepenson book and take a break).
Now, metal detectors are supposed to be shielded from interfering with devices not going through them, but, needless to say, that's not always the case. It's more than possible a more sensitive than usual hard drive could be corrupted by just passing next to one.
For further reference, see Here, Here, and Here--
The most valuable commodity I know of is information. - Michael Douglas as Gordon Gekko, Wall Street
Older X-ray machines used higher levels of radiation, which means that your risk increases with the age of the airport.
The other risk factor is the HD itself. How dense is the media? Is it set up to do software RAID? Is it a name brand, or is it a fly-by-night? Speaking generally, Big Name manufacturers are more resistant to stresses of all kinds than a HD which just fell off the back of a turnip truck.
To summarize--let your modern laptop go through modern X-ray machines without too much worry. But if either of them aren't modern, you might want to ask Security to hand-check it.
As it turns out, the little seat-back (or whatever) tables on the plane had magnets in them to keep the meal-service stuff in place. The put their laptops on the tray tables, turned them on, and saw...a mess.
Not sure if they still do this, but it's worth asking a flight attendant.
X-rays are not going to damage a hard drive. The problem is the electric motors that are used for the conveyor belt. These generate strong magnetic fields that can erase or corrupt magnetic media. I've heard of similar problems with subway cars, big electric motors under the car that have been known to erase tapes in boxes that were set on the floor.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
However, recent events and paranoia about airline safety have seen new x-ray devices introduced which can image soft materials like plastic explosives and other things that would not have shown up with a 'conventional' machine. These devices (synthetic aperature x-rays, IIRC?) use a signifigantly higher energy level, and have been proven to fog film. (Remember how the security people will swear up and down that their machine is safe for film? No more!)
The worst part of it all is, for 'security reasons,' they (most often) won't tell you if they even have one of these higher-energy machines, never mind whether or not you just put your film (or your laptop) on one!
I guess the moral of the story is 'insist on hand-inspection for film and laptops.'
Gotta love that security paranoia. What are they expecting? That you're going to go down the hall, plug your super-whizz-bang-space-captain laptop into their PA system and hack the x-ray machine? Well... I've seen some airport security types that would believe that one...
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
A simple solution might be to place things you worry about (such as hard drives) in a lead lined bag. They're generally sold to protect film, but there's no reason you can't stick other things in. Most likely anything inside won't be completely shielded, but it might help some.
Then of course, one can always request that your bag be hand searched.
-Greg
There are known problems with using either of these technologies within a high radiation flux. Secondary scattering from the device case may produce particles that can effect flash ram, and soft xrays may be able to produce a similar effect to ultraviolet light that affects eeprom (or even eprom).
While these technologies are used in spacecraft and radiation area, I know that much effort is placed in shielding such (special "heavy metals free" plastic and ceramics for cases, special epoxies, different device packaging forms).
Magnetic flux densities used in hard drive with modern evaporated or plated media are fairly high, even though the power required is quite small due to the incredibly tiny spot size. This, plus the shielding of the case, plus distance fom magnetic source, makes it unlikely that the focus coils or power supply of an xray generator would have much of an effect.
I will have to start wondering about my Visor, though. Has anybody made any tests?
*whup* "Get along, little electrons. Heeyah!"
It's been noted in a few photography magazines that some new xray machines showing up at airports will streak film. Certain types of film are more EMF sensitive than others (like IR film or other high-speed films), but streaks are showing up on standard b&w/color chrome and negative films and at relatively slow speeds like 200 and 400. One magazine actually suggested that you ask for your film to be hand-inspected. (Which I did on a recent jaunt from Minneapolis to LAX.) This suggests that we're dealing with a new beast, one which is kicking out more EMF than its predecessors.
What I'm not sure of, though, is if these new machines produce sufficient EMF to screw with a hard drive. I know that most of the problem spots are electric motors, but I still wouldn't toss a laptop to chance like that. (And definitely not Zip disks, etc. Anymore it seems like a Zip will corrupt if you look at it wrong.)
----
----
Am I the only one who thinks Microsoft is a misnomer? Perhaps Macrosoft would be a better fit?
Everyone in our group has a Sony Vaio 505 and travels a lot - the case screws seem to vibrate loose on planes all the time. Also I had a Canon EOS camera stop working the same way. So my guess is that it's just as likely that it's the plane that caused the problem as it is the X-ray machine.
-Fzz
I'm not so sure that modern hard-drives are better at surviving x-ray machines than old ones. I happen to have a Toshiba T3200 LABtop computer with a 40MB HDD in it. The drive and computer are so full of shielding that the whole thing weighs 19lbs. It's been through many x-ray machines (as well as dropped, had coffee spilled in it, and innumerable other "don'ts") and still functions. I think it all depends on what the manufacturer's priorities were when designing the HDD.
It may look like I'm doing nothing, but I'm actively waiting for my problems to go away.
--Scott Adams