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I have a broken HDD that contains sensitive data. Since no software can access the disk, I can't wipe it using any of the tools generally suggested.

Breaking the disk physically into very small pieces would probably suffice, but that would require some good tools to do. Just waving a magnet around the disk might still leave the data recoverable by data recovery experts, or am I wrong?

What's an effective way to clear the sensitive data?

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    Lifehacker has an [article](http://lifehacker.com/#!5797029/how-to-dismantle-and-destroy-a-hard-drive) on this subject – mjrider Apr 29 '11 at 20:31
  • Just for kicks, here's a Google data center [procedure for this](http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=1SCZzgfdTBo#at=220). – hyperslug May 01 '11 at 01:43
  • May I add that in the future you could just never keep sensitive data on the platter without strong encryption. That helps also in the case of it getting lost or stolen. – Keith May 24 '11 at 01:54

17 Answers17

21

Save time, I just use a 5lb hammer.

Note: wear safety goggles.

enter image description here

Or buy one of these

sblair
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Moab
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On newer drives, even the high-power magnets I used to use don't work anymore to erase the disk.

If you have a spike, or similar object (hard metal that is pointed, think of a nail that is much bigger) and drive it through the center of the chassis with a hammer. That will bend the platers and damage the heads making it extremely difficult to recover.

A land stake from the hardware store should work for this.

Dispose of the board separate from the drive. This way any encoding information about the drive recorded on the controller will not be available making recovery exponentially more difficult.

After all that, you can safely send the remains to a computer recycler for shredding.

Wuffers
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Peter B
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You're correct; physical destruction is the only good way to do this (you'd need a magnet so strong that it's not feasible to get one for most people unless you're on staff at the Large Hadron Collider). Professional disposal operations generally do this with an industrial metal shredder. For you, bending the platters with a hammer, sandpapering them, and then running a drill through them in multiple points is sufficient to stop anything but advanced forensic data recovery. If you're really concerned about even that, or you just want style points, you might try thermite. It is usually sufficient to melt the platters entirely.

Shinrai
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    Let no man say that SU does not provide help to even the most (seemingly) felonious-helpingly of questions. :P – Ragnar Apr 28 '11 at 14:22
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    @Ragnar - I don't see anything felonious about not wanting people to fish your hard drive out of a dumpster and steal your credit card numbers (although I do personally think actually destroying a drive is too paranoid in 99% of situations) – Shinrai Apr 28 '11 at 14:25
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    @Shinrai - It was just a joke, I was not assuming anything about anybody. I... just thought it would be funny. :( – Ragnar Apr 28 '11 at 14:27
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    @Ragnar - I just read it uncharitably. Sorry to be a buzzkill! – Shinrai Apr 28 '11 at 14:27
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    I had a hard time choosing which of the many excellent answers to accept. In the end I accepted this because the combined hammer-sandpaper-drill is very easy to do and might be more secure than doing just one of them... – StackExchange saddens dancek Apr 29 '11 at 22:42
  • @dancek - Thanks! I was trying to be thorough but not dangerous. (I'm also glad to see this has gone CW now because it's gotten a lot of attention, as much as I'd love to keep pulling rep from it. ;p) – Shinrai Apr 29 '11 at 23:02
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Apparently the method a certain british university uses is drilling a hole through it. Failing which, thermite.

Journeyman Geek
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    +1 for drilling a hole through it, while a very good forensic company could read the unholy parts they're gonna charge a fortune to read something with ragged holes in thats likely to damage their very expensive kit. Make sure you're drilling a couple of holes in the platter though! – Robb Apr 28 '11 at 19:30
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    We use a small drill, and drill in several spots at the University I work at where sensitive data is a big thing. – James Mertz Apr 29 '11 at 03:50
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In addition to all the advice above mentioning physical demolition, I would like to add putting the platters in an oven at the highest possible temperature for ca 20 minutes. IIRC, at those temperatures (if sustained) the magnetic information is lost.

If you think that is insufficient, heat up the platters over an open flame until they more or less glow (gas stoves are great for this!). At that point any information on them is essentially wiped. The flame of a candle could be sufficient, but would require some patience as you "anneal" the surface one square centimeter at a time.

Melting them with termite certainly will destroy the information, but is messy and dangerous and essentially not something you can do at home (in contrast to use a kitchen oven or gas stove).

Edit: Disclaimer: even if using an oven or gas stove is relatively safe from a fire hazard perspective, heating these platters might emit unpleasant and potentially toxic fumes. Make sure you have some good ventilation. Also, what I had mind when writing the above is to just heat the platters themselves, not the entire harddrive with controller card and all. (Disclaimer added as per Shinrai's recommendation).

IllvilJa
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  • I'm actually hesitant to +1 this because, while you're right, heating these at those temperatures for sustained periods of time can cause all kinds of toxic gases to leech out and be in your house. At least thermite is obviously "STAY THE HELL AWAY FROM THIS" dangerous. Add a disclaimer and I'll gladly +1 though because this is good science. – Shinrai Apr 28 '11 at 21:11
  • @Shinrai: good point regarding toxic gases, I've added the disclaimer. – IllvilJa Apr 28 '11 at 21:29
  • also are hard disks air tight? If so they may explode like a can in an oven – Matthew Lock Apr 29 '11 at 01:40
  • This might not be adequate - the Curie temperature is higher than I thought - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curie_point – Mark Ransom Apr 29 '11 at 02:17
  • @Mark Ransom: Yes, the temperature of an oven might be sufficient to risk the loss of information on the hard drive platters (I got that information from a vendor of datacenter fire security solutions), but it might still be in the "gray area" temperature wise where you still cannot *guarantee* the loss of information. Making the platters glow (reaching temperatures of several hundred degrees celsius) should really render the information unreadable. (And again, in addition to this, inflict some of the suggested violence to the drive and it's data is *really* unrecoverable at that point) – IllvilJa Apr 29 '11 at 09:05
  • @Matthew Lock - Hard drives are almost-but-not-quite airtight. They won't work in a vacuum because multi-platter hard drives rely on air pressure to keep the disks apart. (I have no idea if single-platter drives can be made airtight. – Shinrai Apr 29 '11 at 19:24
  • IIRC, the read/write heads keep their precise distance to the spinning disks by the aid of aerodynamics, so yes, there is air in the harddrives. However, this air is kept extremely clear (a single dust grain on a disk is enough to make a read/write head bounce and then, possible, bounce back and to some extent impacting the magnetic surface. – IllvilJa Apr 29 '11 at 20:27
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I opened a lot of drives, and they contain strong neodym magnets inside, so I suspect that trying to erase the data from outside is a waste of time. However, I would like to hear an expert, if just the electronics get destroyed by strong magnetism, or how much energy you need, to erase a hdd from outside.

But most drives have small stickers at the side, which cover small wholes, about as thick as a pencil. You can open the drive, fill it with sand, and turn it around sometimes. Or scratch the surface with a screwdriver or something like that.

hdds with hole on the side - more or less taken apart

I can recommend to open the drive, to get to the magnetic end of the head. Meanwhile, you get to the platters and can scratch them enough, to make it expensive as hell to recover some data.

user unknown
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Works on Windows, Linux, and Mac...

http://www.diskstroyer.com/

enter image description here

user39559
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  • I'm sorry, but this is basically ___a scam___. Taking apart a hard disk is easy as cheese. Scratching up the platters like that does not destroy the data completely. The reason people suggest drilling holes or thermite is because the data is not only stored on the surface of the platters, it is also stored _inside_ the platters as well. [Take a look at how the data is stored](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:MagneticMedia.svg). – bobobobo Sep 17 '13 at 18:40
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You could use a Propane Torch to do the job. You can melt the platters with it. Clean job :-)

LaLeX
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Here is a step by step guide on how to take apart the drive and then sand the and destroy the platters to surely make the data unreadable.

http://web.archive.org/web/20130705190750/http://zatz.com/dominopower/article/how-to-destroy-a-hard-drive-on-purpose/

Also, instead of using the Torx screws, you can use a flat-head to remove the top of the hard drive.

terdon
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paradd0x
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  • Agreed. Just get a torx screwdriver, or else a set of precision screwdrivers with small flat-heads (you can probably get one from the dollar-store). Open the cover, remove the platters, and have your way with them. Hell, you don’t even have to destroy them, you can use them in some sort of tech-craft. (Also, once you’ve got the platters out, you can likely use a normal magnet directly on them to corrupt them enough.) – Synetech May 24 '11 at 04:05
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You should take it to a shooting range! What better way to improve your aim, destroy the disk, and have fun while doing all that.

slowpoison
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Years ago, you used to be able to smack the center with a ball peen hammer, and this was enough to knock the platters off of the axis, and the minute someone came along and tried to power up the drive, the platters would get shredded internally when it tried to spin. Not sure if this is still a valid tactic or not.

Wayne Johnston
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DaBaer
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  • I don't think this works so well anymore but I really don't know. I'd forgotten this trick! – Shinrai Apr 28 '11 at 19:16
  • I guess works best if I knew how hardy the modern hardware was on the inside... if the drives are as fragile on the inside as they were, say 8 years ago, then I think this may still work. – DaBaer Apr 28 '11 at 19:29
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The only way to permanently destory data with no chance of any recovery regardless of how much effort you could put into recovery is to heat the platters to the Curie point. Granted, that's possibly beyond the point at which the platters will turn to molten metal, but for absolute certainty of destruction in a cost-is-no-object scenario I'd feed the disks through a hammer shredder and then melt the results into bars.

Bacon Bits
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It should be pointed out that it doesn't take much distortion of the magnetic signal to make the disks useless. The forensic techniques that used to be effective on a drive are now part of the standard electronics, just to get the densities required. A little sandpaper is probably perfectly effective.

If you want total security, just keep the platters and use them as coasters.

Mark Ransom
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0

The site http://www.diskstroyer.com/ sells a kit that includes the equipment and directions about how to destroy the drive.

Zoredache
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According to wikipedia, sufficient quantities of concentrated hydrofluoric acid will completely dissolve glass, ceramic, and aluminum, the three most common substrates for hard disk platters.

It's not exactly a household item, though.

Ryan C. Thompson
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Call a couple of your local document shredding companies. Most have gotten into the media destruction angle at this stage. Around here (New England) the average cost is about $10/disk for them to drop it into a monster chipper. Itsy bitsy pieces out the other end. If I do this for a client, I usually get a zip-lock baggie of pieces to bring back to them as proof, along with the receipt. I used to use several of the methods above, but for $10, it's not worth the time and effort.

Liam
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Some one at Lifehackers must have read your post.

http://lifehacker.com/#!5797029/how-to-dismantle-and-destroy-a-hard-drive

N4TKD
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