I have no clue... as to the validity of your stance of superior knowledge
Your assessment of the level of my knowledge is purely an extrapolation you have made on your own based on the quality of information in my posts. I make no claims of superior knowledge...
My only claim was that I have taken apart hundreds of hard drives and never seen a single gyroscope...
Based on my 20 years of experience as an IT System Administrator, and multiple industry certifications (both hardware and software) I believed that I was qualified to challenge your claim.
College professors are the biggest dorks out there (after IEEE engineers)... and it does not surprise me that one would be preaching bogus information as if it were gospel and that his minion sheep would not challenge his false claim. They often are very knowledgeable in a very narrow area, but in their minds that expertise is wider than it really is.
Maybe you can get your money back?
The facts is that hard drives are on the space shuttle... they can take some movement.
What hurts HDD's is sudden G-Force shocks... like if you had dropped it while it was spinning. Just holding it and moving them around is no big deal.
When the platters are spinning the drive will resist your movement of it in a gyroscopic fashion... but that is not because there are gyroscopes in there. I would not have made my comments except that you proclaimed it as fact and then told us we just didn't know as much as you.... and them offered up some bogus google search as proof.
We can't have people being misled.