Ten Ways To Destroy a Hard Disk
Barence writes "Following his blog last week about the homemade hard disk destroyer, Bustadrive, Mike Jennings was deluged with comments from readers, both on the blog and here on Slashdot. Most seemed to like the product, but also offered up far more innovative and madcap methods of hard disk destruction, with a wide range of implements used — household and otherwise. In this follow-up post, he rounds up the best of an imaginative bunch of hard disk destruction methods."
If you have the harddisk out of the shell, buy 1 package of sparklers, if it's inside it, get around 4-5 packages (the metal sticks with grayshit on them)
Strip the grayshit (magnesium normally, if its something else it probably wont work as well through the case) and crush it into a powder off of all sparklers but 1, you can strip the last one down to about an inch or so from the tip. Pile it all on the harddisk/shell, light the sparkler tip that's left, insert into the pile, and other than it appearing as though the sun is arm's length in front of you for 5-10 seconds, anything underneath shall be melted/vaporized due to the white hot heat released. I've melted through steel grills at my local beach at night this way before, around 11pm 1 package of sparklers prepared this way lit up the local beach on long island sound for about a mile in all directions as if it was daytime.
1 - The classic hammer
2 - "What's wrong with an angle grinder?"
3 - The average welding torch
4 - weaponry, from 12-gauge shotguns to high velocity rifles
5 - Science fans will be pleased to see an electromagnet on the list
6 - use a drill
7 - Hard disk platters are generally made from aluminium, which melts at 660.32C
8 - Electric log splitters
9 - An industrial shredder
10 - Finally, another method that scores valuable points for science: Thermite
No he can not. There is not a single data recovery company in the whole wide world advertising this capability and there isn't a single lawsuit in which data from an overwritten disk has been used as evidence. Data recovery from overwritten hard disks is BULLSHIT.
Who the hell modded this informative?
It's perpetuating a myth.
Even Guttman says that with modern hard disks it's impossible to retrieve data once overwritten.
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/secure_del.html
Also:
http://sansforensics.wordpress.com/2009/01/15/overwriting-hard-drive-data/
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BMO