©1998-





Hitachi HGST 4GB HDD Cutaway





Comments:
The Hitachi (HGST) Microdrive miniature hard disk drive artwork was commissioned
by the National Geographic for inclusion in a number of their articles explaining
the underlying technologies to various hi-
Description:
Microdrive is a brand name for a miniature, 1-
These drives fit into any CompactFlash II slot; however, they may consume more power
than flash memory (currents on the order of 190 mA, peak 310 mA, at 3.3 V) and therefore
may not work in some low-
The Microdrive was developed and launched in 1999 by IBM with a capacity of 170 MB, which was expanded to 8 GB by 2006. They weigh about 16 g (~1/2 oz), with dimensions of 42.8×36.4×5 mm (1.7×1.4×.2 in). These were the smallest hard drives in the world at the time. From 1999 to 2003 they were known as IBM Microdrives, and from 2003 as Hitachi Microdrives, when Hitachi bought IBM's hard drive division. Microdrive™ was a registered trademark by IBM and Hitachi for each period.
IBM initially released a 170 MB and 340 MB model. The next year 512 MB and 1 GB models were announced and became available. In December 2002 Hitachi bought IBM's disk drive business, including the Microdrive technology and brand. By 2003, under Hitachi, bigger 2 GB models came out. Over the years, even larger sizes have become available.
Further information: