thesimson01
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2006
- Messages
- 319
Is somebody knows if a magnet can damage a camera memory card (like sd card)? Ex: loosing picture in it..
Is somebody knows if a magnet can damage a camera memory card (like sd card)? Ex: loosing picture in it..
I know of two people that lost their memory cards due to magnets. It wipped out everything and the card was useless. That areticle that Abby's dad posted mentioned the magnets on the exray rollers not harming it. That is try because tat are not so strong. If they were it would wipe out the data on all the laptops that went through them.
Dan
For venerable floppies, this statement holds true. We placed a 99-cent magnet on a 3.5-inch floppy for a few seconds. The magnet stuck to the disk and ruined its data.
Fortunately, most modern storage devices, such as SD and CompactFlash memory cards, are immune to magnetic fields. "There's nothing magnetic in flash memory, so [a magnet] won't do anything," says Bill Frank, executive director of the CompactFlash Association. "A magnet powerful enough to disturb the electrons in flash would be powerful enough to suck the iron out of your blood cells," says Frank.
The same goes for hard drives. The only magnets powerful enough to scrub data from a drive platter are laboratory degaussers or those used by government agencies to wipe bits off media. "In the real world, people are not losing data from magnets," says Bill Rudock, a tech-support engineer with hard-drive maker Seagate. "In every disk," notes Rudock, "there's one heck of a magnet that swings the head."
Googling memory cards and damage, there are tons of articles on the internet that reinforce the fact that magnets cannot harm memory cards - they are an electronic storage media, not magnetic. The instances they cite where it MIGHT be possible to damage a memory card would involve high amounts of magnetism rapidly turned on and off, such as with a large electric magnet, which would produce its own electric current, or a very large magnet, such as an MRI machine, which would destroy it, possibly for a similar reason as the previous example. The basic answer is that while magnets will erase floppies or hard drives, they don't touch flash-type (electronic) memory. They do say that they are susceptible to many common errors, such as dirt, the accidental drop of water, excessive heat, etc. Another link, maybe clearer than the other. Other than that somehow the data vanished from the memory cards mentioned above, do you have any proof that it was from magnets, and if so how were they exposed to such high magnetic forces? Just curious, mostly because my first gut feeling, before I started actually looking for an answer, was that magnetic exposure would be highly undesirable.
Fred
One of the two people did it as a test, had images on the card put a strong magnet on it, i am not sure how long, then went to read it and could not read the card. The magnet he used was the type magicians use.
...and humans are not able to perceive static electricity until it has reached about 1,500 volts....
Try sticking your tongue between the contacts of a 9 volt battery and then tell me that you can't perceive electricity below 1,500 volts. Or play with your electical outlet (don't really!) which is probably just 120 or 240 volts. What makes static electricity special (it's not really different than electricity from a battery or electrical outlet) is that it has very low amperage. .