Who are we ?

tesweb SA was created in 2001 and have over 21 years of experience in the data recovery.

tesweb SA

tesweb SA belongs to a holding company of over 265 employees.

The company and the laboratory are based in Neuchâtel (Switzerland), cradleland of the european microtechnic.

We favour the nearness with our laboratory in Neuchâtel. None of our competitors can pretend to be as fast in terms of time limit.

The professional computing services are right to work with us. Indeed, our partnership network counts over shops across Switzerland.

Our swiss laboratory

Our laboratory is adjacent to our administrative offices. The access to this laboratory is secure with a swipe card locking system that allows only a few permitted persons to enter. It also offers a traceability for each entrance and exit.

Our laboratory is divided in different specific zones (soldering, disassembly, recovery, clean room, etc.).

Our laboratory is adjacent to our administrative offices. The access to this laboratory is secure with a swipe card locking system that allows only a few permitted persons to enter. It also offers a traceability for each entrance and exit.

Our swiss clean room

We have our own clean room in Neuchâtel (in a separate room of our laboratory) of 12m2 ISO 5 certified.

This clean room is under overpressure and inside, there's a laminar flow hood ISO 3 certified.

This in the laminar flow hood that we proceed to the manipulations that require a absolute cleanness, as, for example, changing the head stack or cleaning the platters.

Miniaturization and density of the HDDs

The detail of a platter surface is so small, that the informations density per cm2 is extremely high. Here are some examples of density on actual HDDs.

WD 500Gb
(2001)
Seagate 1Tb
(2010)
Seagate 4Tb
(2014)
Bits (0 or 1) per cm2 12 billions 23 billions 95 billions
Gigabytes per cm2 1.5 Go 2.9 Go 11 Go
DVD per cm2 0.37 DVD 0.74 DVD 3 DVD
Pictures per cm2 500 pictures 1000 pictures 4000 pictures
MP3 per cm2 370 MP3 750 MP3 3000 MP3
Word file per cm2 3000 .doc 6000 .doc 23'800 .doc

Distance between a reading head and the surface

A read/write head's size is close to 12 nanometers, or 0.000012 millimeters. The platters, that are spinning very fast, create a 250km/h draught on the platters surface. This allows the reading heads to fly over the surface, thanks to the bearing capacity.

The least unevenness on the platter will damage the reading irreparably, then the rest of the surface will be damaged because of the domino effect.

0.000001 millimeters = 1 nanometer
Dist. between head and surface = 7 nanometers
Virus = 10 to 400 nanometers
Thin dust = 6'000 nanometers
Very thin hair = 50'000 nanometers