Computer Memories, Inc. (CMI) was a
Chatsworth, California manufacturer of
hard disk drive
A hard disk drive (HDD), hard disk, hard drive, or fixed disk is an electro-mechanical data storage device that stores and retrieves digital data using magnetic storage with one or more rigid rapidly rotating hard disk drive platter, pla ...
s during the early 1980s. CMI made basic
stepper motor
A stepper motor, also known as step motor or stepping motor,Clarence W. de Silva. Mechatronics: An Integrated Approach (2005). CRC Press. p. 675. "The terms ''stepper motor'', ''stepping motor'', and ''step motor'' are synonymous and are often u ...
-based drives, with low cost in mind.
History
The company was founded in 1979 by Raymond Brooke, Abraham Brand, James Willets and James Quackenbush all formerly of
Pertec Computer Corporation, with initial seed money from Raymond Brooke and Abraham Brand and investors Irwin Rubin, Frederic Heim and Marshall Butler. It was incorporated August 6, 1979. Initially the company offered three 5 1/4" disk drives with a capacity of 5, 10 or 15 megabytes (unformatted). Early investors in the company included Intel Corporation. The company made an initial public offering on August 23, 1983 of approximately 2,000,000 shares of common stock. August 1984 they secured a major contract as sole producer of 20-
megabyte
The megabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. Its recommended unit symbol is MB. The unit prefix ''mega'' is a multiplier of (106) in the International System of Units (SI). Therefore, one megabyte is one million bytes ...
hard drives for the base model of the
IBM PC/AT. Unfortunately, the Singapore-manufactured CM6000 drives proved highly unreliable. Dealers reported failure rates as high as 25 to 30 percent. Part of the problem was high demand for the PC/AT;
IBM
International Business Machines Corporation (using the trademark IBM), nicknamed Big Blue, is an American Multinational corporation, multinational technology company headquartered in Armonk, New York, and present in over 175 countries. It is ...
increased its order from 90,000 units in 1984 to 240,000 in 1985, and manufacturing quality suffered. Second, the design of the disk drive subsystem itself was flawed. CMI was unable to keep up with what Brand described as a "very, very aggressive" IBM production plan, and
obtained a $6 million emergency loan from an unnamed lender, likely IBM.
At the same time,
Quantum Corporation
Quantum Corporation is a data storage, management, and protection company that provides technology to store, manage, archive, and protect video and unstructured data throughout the data life cycle. Their products are used by enterprises, media ...
sued CMI for
patent
A patent is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the legal right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention for a limited period of time in exchange for publishing an sufficiency of disclosure, enabling discl ...
infringement relating to the
servo mechanism in the entire CM6600 line of drives. Instead of putting the tracking grating on the head arm and driving the arm directly from a
voice coil
A voice coil (consisting of a former, collar, and winding) is the coil of wire attached to the apex of a loudspeaker cone. It provides the motive force to the cone by the reaction of a magnetic field to the current passing through it.
Th ...
, like the Quantum designs, CMI made a composite motor that would bolt to the drive in place of the usual stepper motor, with the voice coil on the bottom and the tracking mechanism on top (similar to DC servo motors used in process controls and robotics). CMI connected the motor to the arm with a metal-band pulley, the same mechanism they used on their stepper-motor drives. Since the feedback system was behind the pulley, it had to compensate for slack in the arm, one of several things the CMI firmware didn't take account of.
In late 1985 IBM announced that it would no longer use CMI drives after its contract expired at the end of the year.
CMI released a "patent-free" 7600 series of drives in 1986, but never recovered from the IBM incident. On July 2, 1986, they announced their departure from hard disk production and marketing—95% of their business. Attempts were made in 1987 to sell the remainder of the company to movie producer
Hemdale Film Corporation
Hemdale Film Corporation (known as Hemdale Communications after 1992) was an independent American-British film production company and Film distributor, distributor. The company was founded in London in 1967 as the Hemdale Company by actor David He ...
and to animated television program producer
DIC Animation City; however, both deals fell through.
In 1988 the shell corporation, still traded publicly, was acquired by Paul and Natalie Koether of
Far Hills, New Jersey who used it as an investment vehicle; in 1992 it was renamed American Holdings, Inc. In 1995 it was renamed Pure World, Inc. after its largest subsidiary, a supplier of
kava
Kava or kava kava (''Piper methysticum'': Latin 'pepper' and Latinized Ancient Greek, Greek 'intoxicating') is a plant in the Piperaceae, pepper family, native to the Pacific Islands. The name ''kava'' is from Tongan language, Tongan and Marqu ...
and other botanical products. Finally, on June 6, 2005, it was acquired by
Naturex, S.A., a French competitor.
References
External links
Funding Universe: Pure World, Inc.
{{Hard disk drive manufacturers
American companies disestablished in 2005
American companies established in 1979
Computer companies disestablished in 2005
Computer companies established in 1979
Computer storage companies
Defunct computer companies of the United States
Defunct computer hardware companies
Defunct manufacturing companies based in Greater Los Angeles