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Track (disk drive)
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A disk drive track[1] is a circular path on the surface of a disk or diskette on which information is magnetically recorded and from which recorded information is read.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (May 2025) |

(A) Track
(B) Geometrical sector
(C) Track sector
(D) Cluster
A track is a physical division of data in a disk drive, as used in the Cylinder-Head-Record (CCHHR) addressing mode of a CKD disk. The concept is concentric, through the physical platters, being a data circle per each cylinder of the whole disk drive. In other words, the number of tracks on a single surface in the drive exactly equals the number of cylinders of the drive.
Tracks are subdivided into blocks (or sectors, pages) (see: Storage block and Virtual page).
The term track is sometimes prefaced with the word logical (i.e. "3390-9 has 3 logical tracks per physical track") to emphasize that it is used as an abstract concept, not a track in the physical sense.
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