Maxtor DIAMONDMAX 90910D8 User Manual

This document is a condensed version of the full Product Reference Manual.  
This version only includes the Maxtor Information about the Product. Information  
that can be found in the ANSI specification is not included in this document to  
reduce its over all size. Also eliminated are the Table of Contents and Glossary.  
This condensed version is created to allow faster downloading from Maxtor's  
Internet home page and MaxFax services.  
DiamondMaxPlus2500  
91000D8, 90910D8, 90875D7, 90840D7  
90750D6, 90625D5 and 90500D4  
Part #1402/A  
All material contained herein Copyright © 1998 Maxtor Corporation.  
DiamondMax™, DiamondMax™ 1280, DiamondMax™ 1750, Diamond-  
Max™ 2160, DiamondMax™ 2880, DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 and Max-  
Fax™ are trademarks of Maxtor Corporation. No Quibble® Service is a  
registered trademark of Maxtor Corporation. Other brands or products are  
trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Contents  
and specifications subject to change without notice. All rights reserved.  
Printed in the U.S.A. 5/98  
Corporate Headquarters  
510 Cottonwood Drive  
Milpitas, California 95035  
Tel: 408-432-1700  
Fax: 408-432-4510  
Research and Development  
Engineering Center  
2190 Miller Drive  
Longmont, Colorado 80501  
Tel: 303-651-6000  
Fax: 303-678-2165  
BeforeYou Begin  
Thank you for your interest in the Maxtor DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 AT hard disk drives. This manual provides  
technical information for OEM engineers and systems integrators regarding the installation and use of DiamondMax  
hard drives Drive repair should be performed only at an authorized repair center. For repair information, contact  
theMaxtorCustomerServiceCenterat800-2MAXTORor408-432-1700.  
Before unpacking the hard drive, please review Sections 1 through 4.  
CAUTION  
Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 2500 hard drives are precision products. Failure to  
follow these precautions and guidelines outlined here may lead to  
product failure, damage and invalidation of all warranties.  
1
2
BEFOREunpackingorhandlingadrive,takeallproperelectro-staticdischarge(ESD)  
precautions,includingpersonnelandequipmentgrounding.Stand-alonedrivesaresensitiveto  
ESDdamage.  
BEFOREremovingdrivesfromtheirpackingmaterial,allowthemtoreachroom  
temperature.  
3
4
Duringhandling,NEVERdrop,jar,orbumpadrive.  
OnceadriveisremovedfromtheMaxtorshippingcontainer,IMMEDIATELYsecurethedrive  
throughitsmountingholeswithinachassis.Otherwise,storethedriveonapadded,grounded,  
antistaticsurface.  
5
NEVERswitchDCpowerontothedrivebyplugginganelectricallyliveDCsourcecableinto  
thedrive'sconnector.NEVERconnectalivebustothedrive'sinterfaceconnector.  
Please do not remove or cover up Maxtor factory-installed drive labels.  
They contain information required should the drive ever need repair.  
DIAMONDMAXPLUS2500INTRODUCTION  
SECTION 1  
Introduction  
Maxtor Corporation  
Maxtor Corporation has been providing high-quality computer storage products since 1982. Along the way,  
we’ve seen many changes in data storage needs. Not long ago, only a handful of specific users needed more than  
a couple hundred megabytes of storage. Today, downloading from the Internet and CD-ROMs, multimedia,  
networking and advanced office applications are driving storage needs even higher. Even home PC applications  
need capacities measured in gigabytes, not megabytes.  
Products  
Maxtor’s products meet those demanding storage capacity requirements with room to spare. They feature  
proven compatibility and reliability. While DiamondMaxPlus 2500 is the latest addition to our family of  
high performance desktop hard drives, the DiamondMax™ 3400, DiamondMax™ 2880 and DiamondMax™  
2160 series hard drives deliver industry-leading capacity, performance and value for many PC applications.  
Support  
No matter which capacity, all Maxtor hard drives are supported by our commitment to total customer  
satisfaction and our No Quibble® Service guarantee. One call – or a visit to our home page on the Internet  
provide you the information you need quickly, accurately and in the form you prefer – a fax, a downloaded  
file or a conversation with a representative.  
Manual Organization  
This hard disk drive reference manual is organized in the following method:  
Section 1 – Introduction  
Section 2 – Description  
Section 3 – Specifications  
Section 4 – Installation  
Section 5 – AT Interface  
Section 6 – Host Software Interface  
Section 7 – Interface Commands  
Section 8 – Service and Support  
Appendix – Glossary  
Abbreviations  
ABBRV DESCRIPTION  
ABBRV DESCRIPTION  
ATA AT attachment  
bpi bits per inch  
MB megabyte  
Mbits/sec megabits per second  
CHS cylinder - head - sector  
db decibels  
MB/sec megabytes per second  
MHz megahertz  
dBA decibels, A weighted  
DMA direct memory access  
ECC error correction code  
fci flux changes per inch  
ms millisecond  
MSB most significant bit  
mV millivolts  
ns nanoseconds  
G
acceleration  
PIO programmed input/output  
RPM revolutions per minute  
tpi tracks per inch  
GB gigabyte  
Hz hertz  
KB kilobyte  
UDMA ultra direct memory access  
µsec microsecond  
LBA logical block address(ing)  
LSB least significant bit  
mA milliamperes  
V
volts  
W
watts  
1 – 4  
DIAMONDMAXPLUS2500INTRODUCTION  
Conventions  
If there is a conflict between text and tables, the table shall be accepted as being correct.  
Key Words  
The names of abbreviations, commands, fields and acronyms used as signal names are in all uppercase type  
(e.g., IDENTIFY DRIVE). Fields containing only one bit are usually referred to as the “name” bit instead of  
the “name” field.  
Names of drive registers begin with a capital letter (e.g., Cylinder High register).  
Numbering  
Numbers that are not followed by a lowercase “b” or “h” are decimal values. Numbers that are followed by  
a lowercase “b” (e.g., 01b) are binary values. Numbers that are followed by a lowercase “h” (e.g., 3Ah) are  
hexadecimal values.  
Signal Conventions  
Signal names are shown in all uppercase type.  
All signals are either high active or low active signals. A dash character (-) at the end of a signal name  
indicates that the signal is low active. A low active signal is true when it is below ViL and is false when it is  
above ViH. A signal without a dash at the end indicates that the signal is high active. A high active signal is  
true when it is above ViH and is false when it is below ViL.  
When a signal is asserted, it means the signal is driven by an active circuit to its true state.  
When a signal is negated, it means the signal is driven by an active circuit to its false state.  
When a signal is released, it means the signal is not actively driven to any state. Some signals have bias  
circuitry that pull the signal to either a true or false state when no signal driver is actively asserting or negating  
the signal. These instances are noted under the description of the signal.  
1 – 5  
SECTION 2  
Product Description  
Maxtor DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 AT disk drives are 1-inch high, 3.5-inch diameter random access storage  
devices which incorporate an on-board ATA/Ultra DMA controller. High capacity is achieved by a balanced  
combination of high areal recording density and the latest data encoding and servo techniques.  
Maxtor's latest advancements in electronic packaging and integration methods have lowered the drive's power  
consumption and increased its reliability. Advanced magneto-resistive read/write heads, an state-of-the-art head/  
disk assembly using an integrated motor/spindle design allow up to four disks in a 3.5-inch package.  
Exceptionally high data transfer rates and 9.0 ms access times make these performance series disk drives especially  
well-suited to high speed desktop and server applications.  
DiamondMax Plus 2500 Key Features  
ANSI ATA-4 compliant PIO Mode 4 interface (Enhanced IDE)  
Supports Ultra DMA Mode 2 for up to 33 MB/sec data transfers  
512 KB buffer with multi-adaptive cache manager  
9.0 ms seek time  
Zone density and I.D.-less recording  
High reliability with > 500,000 hour MTBF  
Outstanding shock resistance at 200 Gs  
High durability with 50 K constant start/stop cycles  
Advanced multi-burst on-the-fly Error Correction Code (ECC)  
Extended data integrity with ECC protected data and fault tolerant servo synchronization fields  
Supports EPA Energy Star Standards (Green PC Friendly) with ATA powering savings commands  
Auto park and lock actuator mechanism  
Low power consumption  
S.M.A.R.T. Capability  
Note: Maxtor defines one megabyte as 106 or one million bytes (1,000,000) and one gigabyte as 109 or one billion bytes (1,000,000,000).  
2 – 1  
PRODUCTDESCRIPTION  
Product Features  
Functional / Interface  
Maxtor DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 hard drives contain all necessary mechanical and electronic parts to interpret  
control signals and commands from an AT-compatible host computer. See Section 3 Product Specifications, for  
complete drive specifications.  
Zone Density Recording  
The disk capacity is increased with bit density management – common with Zone Density Recording. Each  
disk surface is divided into 16 circumferential zones. All tracks within a given zone contain a constant  
number of data sectors. The number of data sectors per track varies in different zones; the outermost zone  
contains the largest number of data sectors and the innermost contains the fewest.  
Read/Write Multiple Mode  
This mode is implemented per ANSI ATA/ATAPI-4 specification. Read/Write Multiple allows the host to  
transfer a set number of sectors without an interrupt request between them, reducing transfer process  
overhead and improving host performance.  
UltraDMA - Mode 2  
Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 2500 hard drives fully comply with the new ANSI Ultra DMA protocol, which  
greatly improves overall AT interface performance by significantly improving burst and sustained data  
throughput.  
Multi-word DMA (EISA Type B) - Mode 2  
Supports multi-word Direct Memory Access (DMA) EISA Type B mode transfers.  
Sector Address Translation  
All DiamondMax Plus 2500 drives feature a universal translate mode. In an AT/EISA-class system, the drive  
may be configured to any specified combination of cylinders, heads and sectors (within the range of the  
drive's formatted capacity). DiamondMax Plus 2500 drives power-up in a translate mode:  
MODEL  
91000D8  
90910D8  
90875D7  
90840D7  
90750D6  
90625D5  
90500D4  
CYL  
HD  
16  
16  
16  
16  
16  
16  
16  
SPT  
63  
63  
63  
63  
63  
63  
63  
LZone  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
WPcom  
(*)  
CAPACITY  
10.00 GB  
9.10 GB  
8.75 GB  
8.40 GB  
7.50 GB  
MAX LBA  
19,545,120  
17,786,160  
17,101,728  
16,407,216  
14,658,336  
12,215,952  
9,772,560  
19,390  
17,645  
16,966  
16,277  
14,542  
12,119  
9,695  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
(*)  
6.25 GB  
5.00 GB  
(*) The fields LZone (Landing Zone) and WPcom (Write Pre-comp) are not used by the Maxtor hard drive  
and the values may be either 0 or the values set by the BIOS. All capacities listed in the above table are based  
on 106 or one million bytes.  
2 – 2  
PRODUCTDESCRIPTION  
Logical Block Addressing  
The Logical Block Address (LBA) mode can only be utilized in systems that support this form of translation.  
The cylinder, head and sector geometry of the drive, as presented to the host, differs from the actual physical  
geometry. The host AT computer may access a drive of set parameters: number of cylinders, heads and  
sectors per track, plus cylinder, head and sector addresses. However, the drive can’t use these host parameters  
directly because of zoned recording techniques. The drive translates the host parameters to a set of logical  
internal addresses for data access.  
The host drive geometry parameters are mapped into an LBA based on this formula:  
LBA  
= (HSCA - 1) + HHDA x HSPT + HNHD x HSPT x HCYA  
= (HSCA - 1) + HSPT x (HHDA + HNHD x HCYA)  
HSCA = Host Sector Address, HHDA = Host Head Address  
HCYA = Host Cylinder Address, HNHD = Host Number of Heads  
HSPT = Host Sectors per Track  
(1)  
(2)  
where  
The LBA is checked for violating the drive capacity. If it does not, the LBA is converted to physical drive  
cylinder, head and sector values. The physical address is then used to access or store the data on the disk and  
for other drive related operations.  
Defect Management Zone (DMZ)  
Each drive model has a fixed number of spare sectors per drive, all of which are located at the end of the  
drive. Upon detection of a bad sector that has been reassigned, the next sequential sector is used.  
For example, if sector 3 is flagged, data that would have been stored there is “pushed down” and recorded  
in sector 4. Sector 4 then effectively becomes sector 3, as sequential sectors are “pushed down” across the  
entire drive. The first spare sector makes up for the loss of sector 3, and so maintains the sequential order of  
data. This push down method assures maximum performance.  
On-the-Fly Hardware Error Correction Code (ECC)  
33 bits, single burst, guaranteed  
Software ECC Correction  
81 bits, single burst, guaranteed  
33 bits, double bursts, guaranteed  
Automatic Park and Lock Operation  
Immediately following power down, dynamic braking of the spinning disks delays momentarily allowing the  
read/write heads to move to an inner mechanical stop. A small fixed magnet holds the rotary actuator in  
place as the disk spins down. The rotary actuator is released only when power is again applied.  
2 – 3  
PRODUCTDESCRIPTION  
Cache Management  
Buffer Segmentation  
The data buffer is organized into two segments: the data buffer and the micro controller scratch pad.  
The data buffer is dynamically allocated for read and write data depending on the commands received.  
A variable number of read and write buffers may exist at the same time.  
Read-Ahead Mode  
Normally, this mode is active. Following a read request, disk read-ahead begins on the first sector and  
continues sequentially until the allocated buffer is full. If a read request is received during the read-ahead  
operation, the buffer is examined to determine if the request is in the cache. If a cache hit occurs, read-  
ahead mode continues without interruption and the host transfer begins immediately.  
Automatic Write Reallocation (AWR)  
This feature is part of the write cache and reduces the risk of data loss during deferred write operations. If a  
disk error occurs during the disk write process, the disk task stops and the suspect sector is reallocated to a  
pool of alternate sectors located at the end of the drive. Following reallocation, the disk write task continues  
until it is complete.  
Write Cache Stacking  
Normally, this mode is active. Write cache mode accepts the host write data into the buffer until the buffer  
is full or the host transfer is complete. A command complete interrupt is generated at the end of the transfer.  
A disk write task begins to store the host data to disk. Host write commands continue to be accepted and  
data transferred to the buffer until either the write command stack is full or the data buffer is full. The drive  
may reorder write commands to optimize drive throughput.  
2 – 4  
PRODUCTDESCRIPTION  
Major HDA Components  
Drive Mechanism  
A brush-less DC direct drive motor rotates the spindle at 7,200 RPM (±0.1%). The dynamically balanced  
motor/spindle assembly ensures minimal mechanical run-out to the disks. A dynamic brake provides a fast  
stop to the spindle motor upon power removal. The speed tolerance includes motor performance and motor  
circuit tolerances.  
Rotary Actuator  
All DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 drives employ a rotary voice coil actuator which consists of a moving coil, an  
actuator arm assembly and stationary magnets. The actuator moves on a low-mass, low-friction center shaft.  
The low friction contributes to fast access times and low power consumption.  
Read/Write Electronics  
An integrated circuit mounted within the sealed head disk assembly (near the read/write heads) provides up  
to eight head selection (depending on the model), read pre-amplification and write drive circuitry.  
Read/Write Heads and Media  
Low mass, low force magneto-resistive read/write heads record data on 3.5-inch diameter disks. Maxtor uses  
a sputtered thin film medium on all disks for DiamondMax Plus 2500 drives.  
Air Filtration System  
All DiamondMax Plus 2500 drives are assembled in a Class 100 controlled environment. Over the life of the  
drive, a 0.1 micron filter and breather filter located within the sealed head disk assembly (HDA) maintain a  
clean environment to the heads and disks. DiamondMax Plus 2500 drives are designed to operate in a typical  
office environment with minimum environmental control.  
Microprocessor  
The microprocessor controls the following functions for the drive electronics:  
Command execution  
Cache management  
Data correction and error recovery  
Diagnostic execution  
Data sequencing  
Head positioning (including error recovery)  
Host interface  
Index detection  
Spin speed control  
Seeks  
Servo  
S.M.A.R.T.  
2 – 5  
PRODUCTDESCRIPTION  
Subsystem Configuration  
Dual Drive Support  
Two drives may be accessed via a common interface cable, using the same range of I/O addresses. The drives  
are jumpered as device 0 or 1 (Master/Slave), and are selected by the drive select bit in the  
Device/Head register of the task file.  
All Task File registers are written in parallel to both drives. The interface processor on each drive decides  
whether a command written to it should be executed; this depends on the type of command and which  
drive is selected. Only the drive selected executes the command and activates the data bus in response to  
host I/O reads; the drive not selected remains inactive.  
A master/slave relationship exists between the two drives: device 0 is the master and device 1 the slave.  
When J50 is closed (factory default, figure 2-1), the drive assumes the role of master; when open, the drive  
acts as a slave. In single drive configurations, J50 must be closed.  
Cable Select Option  
CSEL (cable select) is an optional feature per ANSI ATA specification. Drives configured in a multiple drive  
system are identified by CSEL’s value:  
– If CSEL is grounded, then the drive address is 0.  
– If CSEL is open, then the drive address is 1.  
Jumper Location/Configuration  
Darkened jumper pins indicate factory-installed (default) shunts.  
JUMPER CONFIGURATION  
J50  
J48  
J46  
J44  
J42  
Master/Slave  
Only drive in single drive system*  
Master drive in dual drive system*  
Slave drive in dual drive system  
C
C
O
Cable Select  
Disabled*  
Enabled  
O
C
4092 Cylinder Limitation  
Disabled*  
Enabled  
O
C
Factory Reserved  
Factory Reserved  
O
O
Key * = Default C = Closed (jumper installed) O = Open (no jumper installed)  
Figure 2-1  
PCBA Jumper Location and Configuration  
4092 Cylinder Limitation  
On some older BIOS', primarily those that auto-configure the disk drive, a hang may occur when the drive  
cylinder value exceeds 4096. The 4092 Cylinder Limitation jumper reduces the capacity in the Identify Drive to  
4092 – allowing large capacity drives to work with older BIOS'. Use Maxtor's MaxBlast Plus installation software  
to access the full capacity of the drive.  
2 – 6  
SECTION 3  
Product Specifications  
Models and Capacities  
MODEL  
91000D8  
90910D8  
90875D7  
90840D7  
90750D6  
90625D5  
90500D4  
Formatted Capacity (MB LBA Mode)  
10,000  
9,100  
8,750  
8,400  
7,500  
6,250  
5,000  
Maxtor defines one megabyte as 106 or one million bytes and one gigabyte as 109 or one billion bytes.  
Drive Configuration  
MODEL  
91000D8  
90910D7  
90875D7  
90840D7  
ATA-4 /EIDE  
EPR4 RLL 16/17  
1:1  
90750D6  
90625D5  
90500D4  
Integrated Controller / Interface  
Encoding Method  
Interleave  
Servo System  
Embedded  
512 KB SDRAM  
16  
Buffer Size / Type  
Data Zones per Surface  
Data Surfaces / Heads  
Aerial Density  
8
8
7
7
6
5
4
1,680 Mb / in2  
Tracks per Surface (Cylinders)  
Track Density  
10,022  
9,800 tpi  
148-190 kfci  
139-179 kbpi  
512  
Flux Density  
Recording Density  
Bytes per Sector / Block  
Sectors per Track  
Sectors per Drive  
174-288  
19,545,120 17,786,160 17,101,728 16,407,216 14,658,336 12,215,952  
9,772,560  
Performance Specifications  
MODEL  
91000D8  
90910D8  
90875D7  
90840D7  
90750D6  
90625D5  
90500D4  
Seek Times (typical)  
Track-to-track  
< 1.0 ms  
9.0 ms  
Average  
Maximum  
< 20 ms  
4.17 ms  
Average Latency  
Rotational Speed (±0.1%)  
Controller Command Overhead  
Data Transfer Rate  
7,200 RPM  
< 0.5 ms  
To/from Interface  
up to 33.3 MB/sec  
up to 16.7 MB/sec  
(Ultra DMA - Mode 2)  
To/from Interface  
(PIO 4/Multi-word DMA - Mode 2)  
To/from Media  
up to 21.9 MB/sec  
< 11.0 sec typical  
Start Time (0 to Drive Ready)  
3 – 7  
PRODUCTSPECIFICATIONS  
Physical Dimensions  
PARAMETER  
STANDARD  
METRIC  
Height  
Length  
Width  
Weight  
1.02 inch  
25.9 millimeters  
146.6 millimeters  
102.1 millimeters  
0.59 kilograms  
5.77 inches  
4.02 inches  
1.3 pounds  
Figure 3 - 1  
Outline and Mounting Dimensions  
3 – 8  
PRODUCTSPECIFICATIONS  
Power Requirements (Average)  
MODE  
12V ± 5%  
2400 mA  
710 mA  
345 mA  
390 mA  
7 mA  
5V ± 5%  
200 mA  
330 mA  
350 mA  
225 mA  
245 mA  
140 mA  
POWER  
Spin-up (peak)  
Seek  
10.2 W  
5.9 W  
5.8 W  
1.3 W  
0.8 W  
Read/Write  
Idle  
Standby  
Sleep  
7 mA  
Power Mode Definitions  
Spin-up  
The drive is spinning up following initial application of power and has not yet reached full speed.  
Seek  
A random access operation by the disk drive.  
Read/Write  
Data is being read from or written to the drive.  
Idle  
The drive is spinning, the actuator is parked and powered off and all other circuitry is powered on.  
The drive is capable of responding to read commands within 40 ms.  
Standby  
The spin motor is not spinning. The drive will leave this mode upon receipt of a command that requires  
disk access. The time-out value for this mode is programmable. The buffer is active to accept write data.  
Sleep  
This is the lowest power state – with the interface set to inactive. A software or hardware reset is required  
to return the drive to the Standby state.  
EPA Energy Star Compliance  
Maxtor Corporation supports the goals of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Energy Star program  
to reduce the electrical power consumption of computer equipment.  
Environmental Limits  
PARAMETER  
OPERATING  
NON-OPERATING/STORAGE  
Temperature  
5° C to 55° C  
low temperature (-40°)  
high temperature (71° C) per MIL-STD-810E, method 501.3,  
climatic category; hot-induced conditions.  
Thermal Gradient  
Relative Humidity  
Wet Bulb  
25° C per hour (maximum)  
5% to 95% (non-condensing)  
27° C (maximum)  
Altitude  
-200 to 10,000 feet  
-200 to 40,000 feet  
Acoustic Noise (Idle mode)  
37 dBA average sound power  
(per ISO 7779, 10 microphone)  
3 – 9  
PRODUCTSPECIFICATIONS  
Shock and Vibration  
PARAMETER  
OPERATING  
NON-OPERATING  
Mechanical Shock  
Random Vibration  
20 Gs, 2.0 ms, no errors  
200 Gs, 2.0 ms, no damage  
10 - 300 Hz at 0.004 G2/Hz  
10 Hz at 0.015 G2/Hz  
40 Hz at 0.015 G2/Hz  
500 Hz at 0.00015 G2/Hz  
301 - 500 Hz at 0.0006 G2/Hz  
Swept Sine Vibration  
5 - 20 Hz  
21 - 300 Hz  
0.049 inches double amplitude  
1.0 G peak amplitude (0 - peak)  
Reliability Specifications  
AFR  
< 1.7%  
The annualized average failure rate (AFR) applies to the period prior  
to the expiration of component design life, and is based on failures  
chargeable to Maxtor.  
MTBF  
> 500,000 hours  
Maxtor does not differentiate between various usage profiles (e.g.,  
power-on hours, power saving modes, non-operating periods or  
operating temperatures within the published specification.)  
Quality Acceptance Rate  
TBD (< 1,500 DPPM)  
The quality acceptance rate indicates the percentage of Maxtor  
products successfully installed by our customers, and/or the number  
of defective parts per million (DPPM) encountered during the entire  
installation process.  
Start/Stop Cycles  
50,000 (minimum)  
This indicates the minimum cycles for reliable start/stop function at a  
60% confidence level.  
Data Reliability  
< 1 per 1014 bits read  
Data errors (non-recoverable). Average data error rate allowed with all  
error recovery features activated.  
Component Design Life  
5 years (minimum)  
Component design life is defined as a.) the time period before  
identified wear-out mechanisms impact the failure rate, or b.) the time  
period up to the wear-out point when useful component life expires.  
3 – 10  
PRODUCTSPECIFICATIONS  
EMC/EMI  
Radiated Electromagnetic Field Emissions - EMC Compliance  
The hard disk drive mechanism is designed as a subassembly for installation into a suitable enclosure and is  
therefore not subject to Subpart J of Part 15 of FCC Rules (47CFR15) or the Canadian Department of  
Communications Radio Interference Regulations. Although not required, the disk mechanism has been  
tested within a suitable end-use product and found to comply with Class B limits of the FCC Rules and  
Regulations of the Canadian Department of Communications.  
The CE Marking indicates conformity with the European Union Low Voltage Directive (73/23/EEC) when  
the disk mechanism is installed in a typical personal computer. Maxtor recommends that testing and analysis  
for EMC compliance be performed with the disk mechanism installed within the user's end-use application.  
Canadian Emissions Statement  
This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class B limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus as set  
out in the radio interference regulations of the Canadian department of communications.  
Le present appareil numerique n'emet pas de bruit radioelectriques depassant les limites applicables aux  
appareils numeriques de Class B prescrites dans le reglement sur le brouillage radioelectrique edicte par le  
ministere des communications du Canada.  
Safety Regulatory Compliance  
All Maxtor DiamondMax™ Plus 2500 drives comply with relevant product safety standards such as CE, CUL,  
TUV and UL rules and regulations. As delivered, DiamondMax Plus 2500 hard disk drives are designed for  
system integration before they are used.  
3 – 11  
INSTALLATION  
SECTION 4  
Handling and Installation  
Pre-formatted Drive  
This Maxtor hard drive has been formatted at the factory. Do not use a low-level formatting program.  
Important Notice  
There are a number of system BIOS’s currently in use which do not support hard drives with more than 4095  
cylinders (2.1 gigabytes). This section contains information describing the conditions which may identify this  
limitation. In order to obtain the full capacity of your Maxtor drive, you will need to follow the recommended  
installation instructions.  
Hard Drive Handling Precautions  
During handling, NEVER drop, jar, or bump a drive. Handle the drive by its sides and avoid touching the printed circuit  
board assembly (PCBA).  
Hard drives are sensitive to electrostatic discharge (ESD) damage. Use proper ESD practices by grounding yourself  
and the computer system the hard drive will be installed in.  
Allow the hard drive to reach room temperature BEFORE installing it in your computer system.  
NEVER switch DC power onto the drive by plugging an electrically live DC source cable into the drive's connector.  
NEVER connect a live connector to the hard drive's IDE interface connector.  
Electro-Static Discharge (ESD)  
To avoid some of the problems associated with ESD, Maxtor advises that anyone handling a disk drive use a  
wrist strap with an attached wire connected to an earth ground. Failure to observe these precautions voids the  
product warranty.  
Manufacturers frequently experience “unsolved” component/hardware malfunctions often caused by ESD. To  
reduce the incidence of ESD-related problems, Maxtor recommends that any electronics manufacturing plans  
include a comprehensive ESD program, the basic elements and functions of which are outlined here:  
ESD Program Element  
Management  
Chief coordinator  
Multi-department committee  
Employee training  
ESD Program Function  
Institute and maintain  
Organize and enforce  
Evaluate and improve  
Educate and inform  
ESD program supplies typically include: wrist- and foot-worn grounding straps; counter-top and floor antistatic  
matting; wrist strap testers; ESD video and training materials. Sources for such supplies include:  
Static Control Systems – 3M  
225-4S, 3M Center  
Charleswater  
93 Border St.  
St. Paul, MN 55144  
West Newton, MA 02165-9990  
Maxtor also offers a complete video training package, “Care and Handling of Maxtor Disk Drives.”  
Contact your Maxtor representative for details.  
4 – 12  
INSTALLATION  
Unpacking and Inspection  
Retain any packing material for reuse. Inspect the shipping container for evidence of damage in transit. Notify  
the carrier immediately in case of damage to the shipping container.  
As they are removed, inspect drives for evidence of shipping damage or loose hardware. If a drive is damaged  
(and no container damage is evident), notify Maxtor immediately for drive disposition.  
Figure 4 - 1  
Multi-pack Shipping Container  
4 – 13  
INSTALLATION  
Figure 4 - 2  
Single Pack Shipping Container (Option A)  
Figure 4 - 3  
Single Pack Shipping Container (Option B)  
Repacking  
If a Maxtor drive requires return, repack it using Maxtor packing materials, including the antistatic bag.  
Physical Installation  
Recommended Mounting Configuration  
The DiamondMax™ Plus 10,000 drive design allows greater shock tolerance than that afforded by larger,  
heavier drives. The drive may be mounted in any attitude using four size 6-32 screws with 1/8-inch  
maximum penetration and a maximum torque of 5-inch pounds. See Figure 3-1 for mounting dimensions.  
Allow adequate ventilation to the drive to ensure reliable operation.  
4 – 14  
INSTALLATION  
Before You Begin  
1
IMPORTANT – PLEASE READ!  
Please read this Installation Sheet completely before installing the Maxtor hard drive. It gives general information for installing a Maxtor hard drive in a  
typical computer system.  
If you don’t understand the installation steps, have a qualified computer technician install the hard drive.  
STOP  
HandlingPrecautions  
Allow the hard drive to reach room temperature BEFORE installing it in your computer system.  
Hard drives are sensitive to electrostatic discharge (ESD) damage. Handle the drive by its sides. DO NOT touch the printed circuit board assembly.  
NEVER drop, jar, or bump the drive.  
DON’T connect/disconnect any drive cables when the power is on.  
DON’T useanylow-levelformattingsoftwareonthisdrive.  
System Requirements  
IDE/ATinterface  
486processororhigher  
OperatingSystemRequirements  
Fordriveslessthanorequalto8.4GB: DOS5.0orhigher  
Fordriveslargerthan8.4GB:  
InstallingasBootdrive(PrimaryMaster)requiresfullinstallationsetofWindows95orhigher(notupgrade).  
Installingasnon-Bootdrive(PrimarySlave,SecondaryMasterorSlave)requiresthatWindows95orhigherbeinstalledontheBootdrive.  
Tools for Installation  
The following tools are needed to complete the installation of your Maxtor hard drive:  
A small Phillips head screw driver  
Your computer user’s manual  
Small needle-nose pliers or  
tweezers  
Operating system software  
Drive Identification Information  
Copy the following information from the label on the top cover of the Maxtor hard drive for future reference:  
Model Number _____________________Serial Number __________________  
Cylinders ______________ Heads _____________ Sectors _______________  
Capacity Barriers  
Due to operating system limitations, DOS cannot access the full capacity of drives larger than 8.4 GB. The Microsoft Windows 95 operating system or  
equivalent (full installation), NOT a Windows 95 upgrade from DOS (Windows 3.1 or 3.11), is required to obtain the full capacity of any hard drive larger than  
8.4 GB.  
Protecting Your Existing Data  
Periodicbackupofimportantdataisalwaysagoodidea.Wheneveryourcomputerison,thereisthepotentialforlosingdataonyourharddrive.Thisisespeciallytruewhenrunning  
diskutilitiesoranysoftwarethatdirectlymanipulatesyourfiles.Maxtorrecommendsthatyoumakeabackupcopyofthefilesonanyexistingharddrives.Ifrequired,this  
datamaythenbecopiedtotheMaxtorharddriveafterithasbeeninstalledinyourcomputer.Refertoyourcomputeruser’smanualfordetaileddatabackupinstructions.  
4 – 15  
INSTALLATION  
General Requirements  
2
System Hardware Requirements  
The minimum system Maxtor recommends for drives 8.4 GB or less is a 486 DX 66 MHz system. For drives larger than 8.4 GB, we recommend a Pentium-class  
system.  
BIOS Requirements  
SystemBIOSdatedpriortoSeptember1997donotsupportdrivesgreaterthan8.4GB.Toobtainthefullcapacityofadrivelargerthan8.4GB,upgradetheBIOS,installaBIOS  
enhancercardorusetheMaxBlastinstallationsoftware(version9.06ornewer).  
Ultra Direct Memory Access (UDMA)  
UDMA mode on a Maxtor hard drive will only activate when the drive is installed in a system with full UDMA capability, i.e., a mother board or interface card  
with the UDMA chips and the associated UDMA software drivers.  
OS Requirements for Large Capacity Hard Drives  
A full installation of the Windows 95 operating system is required for hard drives larger than 8.4 GB when the drive is a Primary Master. An upgrade to  
Windows 95 from Windows 3.11 and/or the DOS operating system will not support drive capacities greater than 8.4 GB when the drive is a Primary Master.  
Hard Drive Identification  
IDE stands for Integrated Drive Electronics and EIDE is Enhanced IDE. The IDE or EIDE interface is designed to support two devices – typically hard drives – on a  
single ribbon cable through one 40 pin connector on the mother board or interface card.  
3
Some mother boards and interface cards may have a second IDE/EIDE connector to support two additional IDE devices. The IDE/EIDE interface is identified as  
a primary or secondary interface. In systems with only a single connector on the mother board or interface card, it is the primary IDE/EIDE interface. To add a  
second IDE/EIDE interface requires a special interface card. In systems with two connectors on the mother board or interface card, one is the primary and the  
other as the secondary.  
The primary interface must be used for at least one IDE device before connecting any devices to the secondary IDE interface.  
Ribbon cable lengths are limited to 18 inches and have two or three 40 pin connectors. This cable is referred to as a parallel cable and IDE devices may be  
connected anywhere on the cable. One of the connectors is attached to the IDE connector on the mother board or interface card and the remaining  
connector(s) are available for the IDE devices.  
Identifying IDE Devices on the Interface  
Each device must be identified as either the Master or Slave device on that interface (cable). Each cable must have a Master before it can have a Slave device  
on the cable. There cannot be two Master or two Slave devices on the same cable.  
IDE devices use jumpers to designate the Master/Slave identification of the device. Each manufacturer may have its own jumpering scheme to identify the  
device as a Master or Slave and its relationship to other IDE devices attached to the same cable.  
JumperSettings  
A jumper is a small piece of plastic that slides over a pair of configuration pins on the drive to activate a specific function. The jumper illustration below shows  
three valid jumper settings for Maxtor hard drives – Master, Slave and Cable Select. Maxtor hard drives can be set as either a Master or a Slave device.  
There are no other jumpers to set when the Maxtor drive is installed on the same ribbon cable with another IDE device.  
Rear View of Maxtor Hard Drive  
Master, Slave and Cable Select Settings  
4 – 16  
INSTALLATION  
Before installing the drive in the computer, you must determine how the jumpers on the Maxtor hard drive are to be set for your system based upon the use of  
the Maxtor hard drive as either a Master or Slave device. Maxtor hard drives are shipped with the Master jumper setting enabled.  
IMPORTANT: If a Maxtor hard drive is being added to a system on the same cable with an existing IDE device, it may be necessary to re-configure the  
jumpers on the existing device to insure that the system will properly recognize both devices. Information regarding the correct jumper configurations on other  
IDE devices is available in their product documentation or from the manufacturer of that device.  
Systems Using Cable Select  
IMPORTANT – Most systems do not use this feature. Unless you are sure that your computer system supports Cable Select, do not set up the drive with this  
feature enabled.  
Maxtor hard drives support Cable Select. The Cable Select method of drive identification allows the system to identify Master and Slave IDE devices based  
upon the position (connector) the IDE device is attached to on the interface (ribbon) cable.  
A special IDE cable select interface (ribbon) cable is required for systems using the Cable Select feature.  
Systems that use Cable Select do not support the standard Master/Slave definitions described above and the standard IDE interface (ribbon) cable cannot  
be used on these systems. If your system supports this feature, refer to the system user’s manual or contact the system manufacturer for specific procedures  
for installing hard drives.  
On Maxtor hard drives, Cable Select is enabled by installing a jumper on J48.  
Relationship to Other IDE Devices  
MaxtorrecommendsthatitsharddrivesbeconfiguredasaMasterdevicetoanyIDEdevicethatisnotaharddrive(e.g.,CD-ROM’s,tapedrives,Zipdrivesetc.).  
Mounting Drive in System  
Turn the computer OFF, disconnect the power cord and remove the cover. Refer to the computer user’s manual for information on removing the cover.  
4
Each system manufacturer uses different types of cases, including desktop, mini-tower, full tower and other special configurations. As a result, there are many  
different possible mounting locations that could be used.  
In a typical system case, there are specific 3.5 inch and 5.25 inch bays available for storage devices. When a 3.5 inch mounting bay is available, mounting  
brackets are not required. If a 5.25 inch mounting bay is used, mounting brackets will be required to mount the Maxtor hard drive in the system case. Refer to  
the system manufacturers user’s manual or contact the system manufacturer directly for additional information.  
Installing 5.25-inch Mounting Brackets and Rails  
If the Maxtor hard drive is being mounted in a 5.25 inch drive bay, the following figure shows how to attach the brackets to the drive. The brackets are not  
required when mounting in a 3.5 inch drive bay.  
Installing in a Device Bay  
After the hard drive is prepared with mounting brackets, if required, and the jumpers are set correctly, the drive can be mounted in a device bay and secured.  
Be sure to secure the drive with all four screws in the device bay. This provides grounding and protection from shock and vibration.  
NOTE:Computersystemsusedifferentmethodsformountingharddrives.Pleaserefertothecomputeruser’smanualorcontactthemanufacturerforspecificmounting  
instructions.  
4 – 17  
INSTALLATION  
Attaching Interface and Power Cables  
In order for the computer to recognize that the Maxtor hard drive is in the system, the  
power cable and IDE interface cable must be properly connected.  
5
1
Attach an available IDE interface connector to J1 on the Maxtor hard drive.  
The striped or colored edge of the IDE interface cable indicates pin 1. Pin 1 on the IDE interface cable connector must match pin 1 on the Maxtor hard drive  
IDE interface connector – closest to the drive power connector. It must also match pin 1 on the IDE connector on the mother board or IDE interface card.  
Refer to the system or interface card user’s manual for identification of pin 1 on their IDE interface connector.  
2
Connect an available power connector to J2 on the Maxtor hard drive. This connector is keyed and will only fit in one orientation. Do not force the  
connector.  
After attaching the IDE  
interface cable and the  
power cable to the Maxtor  
hard drive, verify that all  
other cables connected to  
other devices, the mother  
board or interface card(s)  
are correctly seated.  
Striped/colored edge is pin  
Attaching System Cables  
The computer system the Maxtor hard drive is being installed in will have its own cable placement and connection methods. This means that the location of  
the IDE interface connectors on the mother board and/or interface card and the orientation of pin one is determined by the manufacturer. Also, older systems  
and interface cards may have only a single IDE interface connection – limiting the system to two IDE devices. Refer to the system or interface card user’s  
manual for cable connection and orientation instructions.  
6
Attach the 40-pin IDE interface cable from the Maxtor hard drive to the IDE connector on the mother board or IDE interface card. Insure that the red edge of  
the ribbon cable is oriented to pin 1 on the interface.  
4 – 18  
INSTALLATION  
System Setup  
The following procedures are designed for systems using the DOS 5.0 (or higher), Windows 95 and Windows 98 operating systems. For other operating  
systems (e.g., Windows NT, OS2, UNIX, LINUX and NovellNetWare), refer to the operating system user’s manual for the BIOS setting and other installation  
requirements.  
7
For drives with capacities larger than 8.4 GB, the full installation set for Windows 95A or 95B (OSR2), Windows 98 or equivalent, is required. Operating  
systems that do not support extended interrupt 13 cannot access or format a drive larger than 8.4 GB. This is true regardless of BIOS, mother board or  
interface card support. DOS based operating systems do not support this interrupt and are limited to a maximum drive size that they can format and access of  
8.4 GB. It is not possible to upgrade from a DOS operating system to Windows 95 and obtain the full capacity of a drive larger than 8.4 GB.  
Setting the BIOS (CMOS)  
The SETUP (BIOS) program identifies the system configuration information (e.g., floppy disk drives, hard disk drives, video, etc.) used to identify devices  
attached to the computer during system boot. This includes the information about what kind and how many IDE hard drives are attached to the system.  
IMPORTANT: Please Note – Major BIOS manufacturers like AMI, Award and Phoenix provide their core BIOS programs to system board manufacturers and  
OEM’s who have the capability of making modifications to some of the descriptions and definitions to meet their unique requirements. These changes include,  
but are not limited to, how to access the BIOS, the appearance of the information on the screens and the location of parameters within the BIOS. Refer to the  
system or BIOS manufacturers documentation or contact the system manufacturer for the correct procedure to enter the BIOS setup program for your  
computer. Some manufacturers may use their own unique BIOS definitions and configurations and will also have their own methods for accessing and setting  
the BIOS. If you have a system that uses such a unique BIOS, refer to the system user’s manual or contact the manufacturer for assistance.  
WARNING: When entering settings for the Maxtor hard drive, be careful not to change any of the other BIOS settings, or other parts of  
the system may not work correctly.  
BIOS (CMOS) Parameters  
In order for the computer system to recognize the new Maxtor hard drive, it is necessary to set the system BIOS with the correct information about the drive.  
To do this, run the system SETUP (BIOS) program.  
The Maxtor hard drive must be identified to the system through the BIOS and it must be registered in the BIOS based upon its position relative to the other  
IDE devices connected to the system and recorded in the BIOS.  
Most newer BIOS’ provide the descriptions of Primary Master, Primary Slave, Secondary Master and Secondary Slave (see section 2) which identify the  
device configuration and location on an IDE interface and its relationship to the other IDE devices on the same interface or ribbon cable.  
Some older BIOS versions do not use this terminology for identification and it may be necessary to refer to the system user’s manual or BIOS documentation to  
determine where the drive settings should be set in that specific BIOS. If this information is not available, then it will be necessary to contact the system  
manufacturer for the correct terminology to correctly identify the drives within the system.  
The following are the typical steps to be used to set the hard drive parameters in a BIOS:  
A
Turn the system ON. During the system start-up sequence, run the SETUP (BIOS) program or similar commands to access the system BIOS.  
Note: Newer systems will typically display a message (e.g., press DEL to Enter Setup) identifying how to access the SETUP (BIOS) program.  
Once the SETUP (BIOS) program is active, do one of the following to set the BIOS parameters for the Maxtor hard drive.  
B
1
Enter the BIOS menu where the hard drive settings are displayed, select the correct entry (Primary Master, Primary Slave, Secondary Master or  
Secondary Slave or their equivalents) to set the parameters for the Maxtor hard drive.  
If the SETUP program provides an “AUTO DETECT” capability, use this feature to detect the Maxtor hard drive. If the SETUP program does not have  
AUTO DETECT, set the drive parameters as defined in step 2. Typically, this feature is available for each individual IDE device. It may be necessary to  
exit the BIOS, re-boot the system and re-enter the BIOS before the AUTO DETECT operation will take effect.  
IMPORTANT After the SETUP program has detected the hard drive, verify that the Logical Block Addressing (LBA) mode is enabled for the drive - as  
not all BIOS versions set this feature during the AUTO DETECT process.  
Comment: When LBA is enabled, some BIOS programs (typically Award) will change the values of the cylinders and heads by dividing the cylinders by  
2, 4, 8 or 16 and multiplying the heads by the same value. This operation will not change the capacity of the hard drive.  
If the system correctly detects the drive and does not hang during the boot process, proceed to Section 8. If the system hangs during the POST,  
proceed to Section 9. If Auto Detect did not find the drive and no error message was presented, proceed to step 2 below.  
4 – 19  
INSTALLATION  
2
Enter the BIOS menu where the hard drive definitions are displayed and select the appropriate entry (Primary Master, Primary Slave, Secondary  
Master or Secondary Slave – or their equivalents) for the Maxtor hard drive. If the SETUP program does not provide an AUTO DETECT capability, the  
drive parameters must be set using the User Definable Type (UDT).  
Set the Cylinder, Head and Sector values with the values listed on the drive label. The drive label is located on the top cover of the drive. The fields  
LZone (Landing Zone) and WPcom (Write Pre-comp) are not used by the Maxtor hard drive. These fields may be set to 0 or by the values assigned by  
the BIOS.  
Note: Each BIOS manufacturer uses different methods of identifying the UDT. Newer BIOS’ from all manufacturer’s will usually include an entry called  
“User” or “User 1.” Older BIOS’ vary in the method used to identify the UDT. Following are examples of BIOS UDT: AMI = Type 47, Award = Type 47 and  
Phoenix = Type 48  
Only the cylinder, head and sector values printed on the drive label must be entered. All other values may be zero (0). Set the LBA mode to enabled for this  
drive. Refer to the system user’s manual or contact the system manufacturer for information on enabling LBA.  
If the SETUP program does not provide the UDT, set the BIOS to the drive type with the largest capacity of those listed in the BIOS.  
C
After the drive parameters are entered, follow the SETUP program procedures to save the settings and exit the SETUP program. After changing BIOS  
settings, saving the values and exiting, the SETUP program should force the system to re-boot.  
If you are not sure how the UDT is defined in the BIOS, refer to the computer user’s manual or contact the system manufacturer.  
Hard Drive Preparation  
To finish the installation, the drive must be partitioned and formatted. Hard drive partitioning and formatting may be done with the operating system software  
or with MaxBlast installation software. Select A or B below to complete the preparation of the Maxtor hard drive.  
8
NOTE: Drive letter assignment is controlled by the operating system and not by the BIOS or MaxBlast. The operating system assigns drive letters to all devices  
as follows: (1) to all hard drives and their partitions; (2) to all other devices like CD-ROM’s and tape drives. When adding an additional hard drive to the system,  
the drive letters will be automatically changed by the operating system.  
A
Preparing the hard drive using the operating system software.  
IMPORTANT Due to operating system limitations, DOS operating systems cannot access the full capacity of drives larger than 8.4 GB. The Windows 95 full  
installation, not an upgrade from DOS, operating system or equivalent is required to obtain the full capacity of any drive larger than 8.4 GB.  
If the system or interface card correctly supports the Maxtor hard drive, the drive may be partitioned and formatted using the operating system software. If the  
cylinder limitation jumper (J46) is installed or the BIOS does not support the hard drive, the MaxBlast installation software (option B below) must be used to  
prepare the hard drive.  
NOTE: All versions of DOS, PC-DOS, DR-DOS and Windows 95A (FAT 16 support) have a partition size limitation of 2.1 GB. For drives larger than 2.1 GB, the  
drive must be divided into partitions that do not exceed the 2.1 GB limitation. Windows 95B (OSR2) does not have this limitation. Windows NT, OS2, UNIX,  
LINUX and Novell NetWare may have different limitations but please refer to their documentation or contact the manufacturer to verify their support or  
limitations.  
For detailed operating system installation assistance, refer to the system manufacturers user’s manual, the operating system user’s manual or contact the  
manufacturer directly.  
B
Preparing the hard drive using MaxBlast installation software.  
1
2
Boot the system with the bootable MaxBlast software installation diskette.  
The MaxBlast installation software will load and the first screen of the program will display. Follow the on-screen prompts to complete the hard drive  
installation.  
4 – 20  
INSTALLATION  
System Hangs During Boot  
If the system hangs during the boot process after installing the Maxtor hard drive – either before or after setting the system BIOS – the system many have a  
BIOS with a cylinder limitation. This may occur for hard drives that exceed 2.1 GB. If this happens,  
do the following:  
9
1
2
Turn the system OFF.  
Install the cylinder limitation jumper (J46) on the drive. The figure below shows the Maxtor hard drive configured as a Master or Slave device with the  
cylinder limitation jumper installed.  
IMPORTANT: When the Cylinder Limitation jumper (J46) is installed, the Maxtor hard drive must be prepared using MaxBlast installation software.  
Rear View of Maxtor Hard Drive  
Master, Slave and Cable Select Settings with Cylinder Limitation Enabled  
3
If the BIOS was set to AUTO DETECT, follow the instructions in Section 7 to prepare the hard drive using the MaxBlast installation software.  
IfotherBIOSsettingswereused,accessthesystemBIOSSETUPprogramandsettheparameterstoaUserDefinableTypewith4,092cylinders,16headsand63  
sectorspertrackfortheMaxtorharddrive.ThenfollowtheinstructionsforsettingtheBIOSinSection7thenSection8topreparetheharddrivewithMaxBlastsoftware.  
How to Obtain MaxBlast Software  
If a MaxBlast software installation diskette was not included with the hard drive, the MaxBlast software may be downloaded from Maxtor’s Internet home  
page at http://www.maxtor.com. MaxBlast must be downloaded to a hard drive.  
The instructions for creating the MaxBlast bootable diskette are available for viewing and printing from the MaxBlast download page.  
4 – 21  

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