WILLIAM C GRAY
Medical Practice in Melbourne, FL

License number
Florida 67341
Expiration Date
Dec 1, 1998
Category
Health Care
Type
Emergency Medical Technician
Address
Address
301 W Rutgers St, Melbourne, FL 32901
Phone
(407) 638-0621

Professional information

William Gray Photo 1

William Gray - Palm Bay, FL

Work:
Interplan LLC
Project Manager
WRG Company LLC - Palm Beach Gardens, FL
President
WRG Company LLC - Dublin
Architectural Director
Wessel Associates - Jupiter, FL
Project Architect
Education:
Preservation Institute of the Caribbean - Alexandria, VA
Certificate of Completion in Design Charrette for the Town
Wash/Alex Center for Architecture
BS
University of Florida Virginia Polytechnic Institute
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE


William Gray Photo 2

Apparatus And Method For Predicting Failure Of A Disk Drive

US Patent:
6980381, Dec 27, 2005
Filed:
Apr 23, 2001
Appl. No.:
09/839585
Inventors:
William F. Gray - Melbourne Beach FL, US
Ralf Brown - Pittsburgh PA, US
International Classification:
G11B027/36
US Classification:
360 31
Abstract:
A system for predicting failure of a disk is provided. A test string of performance sensitive reads is built and calibrated. That is, the positioning time and spindle speed for each performance sensitive read is logged. The test string is then applied to a disk and the positioning time and spindle speed for each performance sensitive read, as applied, is measured. The calibrated positioning times and spindle speeds are then compared with the measured positioning times and spindle speeds. The comparison result is used as a reliable predictor for disk failure.


William Gray Photo 3

Apparatus And Method For Predicting Failure Of A Disk Drive

US Patent:
6249887, Jun 19, 2001
Filed:
Sep 21, 1998
Appl. No.:
9/157382
Inventors:
William F. Gray - Melbourne Beach FL
Ralf Brown - Pittsburg PA
International Classification:
H20H 305
US Classification:
714 47
Abstract:
A system for predicting failure of a disk is provided. A test string of performance sensitive reads is built and calibrated. That is, the positioning time and spindle speed for each performance sensitive read is logged. The test string is then applied to a disk and the positioning time and spindle speed for each performance sensitive read, as applied, is measured. The calibrated positioning times and spindle speeds are then compared with the measured positioning times and spindle speeds. The comparison result is used as a reliable predictor for disk failure.