The fact that they're bolted together? If you've ever taken a multi-head drive apart, you'd see that all the heads are generally attached to the same moving piece, so they have no choice but to move "in unison."
The fact that they're bolted together? If you've ever taken a multi-head drive apart, you'd see that all the heads are generally attached to the same moving piece, so they have no choice but to move "in unison."
Snorlax, gulpin,you name it they are all sleepy heads!
Because the NCAA heads are 6 in across the top, making it more narrow and advanced.
4 valve sohc/dohc heads and hemi heads are both cross flow heads. It is because the intake valve is across from the exhaust veruses inline as with regular 2 valve wedge heads.
a small drum with two heads and a snare stretched across the lower head
a small drum with two heads and a snare stretched across the lower head
sfasa
The actual read and write process is done via the read/write heads. The head is a very small coil of wire with a tidy metal core in the centre, the coil is coated in plastic and mounted on the end of a thin metal arm. The arm moves the coil across the disk between the inner and outer track to access different parts of the disk surface. Floppy disks have just one recording surface, Hard disks save several recording surfaces, usually two or four but on large drives may be up to 16. Each surface has its own read/write head, all the heads move at the same time as all the arms are driven by one actuator which moves them around. With floppy disks the heads usually just touch the disk surface. Hard drives spin much faster and the heads skim just off the surface, separation is maintained by a cushion of air created by the design of the plastic head body - it works a little like an aircraft wing.
Controller
Yes, there are. Pin heads, black mustard seeds are 1 mm across.
The shock is due to static electricity jumping across as it heads to earth.
omg she isn't a man get it into your heads :@