| Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Founded | February 1987; 39 years ago (1987-02) inSunnyvale, California, United States |
| Founder |
|
| Defunct | 1994 |
| Fate | Acquired byJT Storage |
| Products | Hard disk drives |
Kalok Corporation was an Americanhard disk drive manufacturer company that was headquartered inSunnyvale, California. It designed and manufactured low-cost 3.5-in hard disk drives for desktop computers, touching off a number ofprice wars in the industry,[1] before going bankrupt in 1994.
Kalok's products were not very well known for their reliability or speed, and still usedstepper motor head actuator technology in 1991, which was considered outdated as the hard drive industry moved tovoice coil head actuators.
Kalok Corporation was founded inSunnyvale, California, in February 1987 by Steven Kaczeus and Wayne Lockhart.[2][3] The company's founders had extensive prior experience in the field of computer data storage, which helped them attract investment.[2]: 33 Kaczeus, the executive vice president of engineering and chief designer of the company's drives,[2][4] had a history of designing successful products for prominent manufacturers such as LaPine Technology,Memorex,Seagate, andStorageTek. Lockhart, meanwhile, brought over 20 years of management experience from variousSilicon Valley companies, includingVarian Associates, Spectra-Physics, and Cooper LaserSonics. The company's name is derived from the beginning syllables of the founders' last names (Ka from Kaczeus andLok from Lockhart).[2] The company was founded with only US$1.5 million in venture capital but immediately made a name for itself in the hard disk drive industry due to its ability to undercut the competition in the 3.5-inch HDD market by several hundreds of dollars. Instrumental to Kalok's early competitive streak was their knack forvalue engineering, the company eschewing a number of parts used in HDDs its contemporary in order to cut costs.[3]: 41 Manufacturing of Kalok's drives was originally performed by the Oriental Precision Company ofSeoul, South Korea, who had a minority interest in Kalok as well as a licensing agreement allowing Oriental Precision to resell Kalok's drives under their own name.[5]
In August 1988, Kalok announced the KL341 and KL343, both 40-MB hard disk drives, along with the KL332, a 30-MB HDD. All three were 3.5-inch-diameter HDDs, cost under $330 each, and were for intended for thevalue-added reseller andOEM markets.[4][6] The KL341 and KL343'sMTBF were rated at 43,000 hours, more than double that of similar 3.5-inch HDDs bySeagate Technology, then the industry leader for such drives.[4] The company announced 100-, 170-, and 330-MB drives for workstations that they hoped would be released in the fourth quarter of 1989.[6]
Monthly output at Oriental Precision went from 1,000 units in December 1987[3]: 41 to 10,000 units per month in October 1988.[5] In late 1989, Kalok began winding down their relationship with Oriental Precision as they focused on raising their own factory in thePhilippines in late 1989.[5][7] The company were helped along with a business relationship with theAyala Corporation, a large conglomerate in the Philippines. Kalok's move to the Philippines coincided with anunsuccessful coup d'état against the government ofPhilippine PresidentCorazon Aquino in December 1989. The attempted coup forced Kalok's factory to shut down temporarily; although Lockhart was trapped a hotel inManila during this time, he jokingly remarked at the time that this event was less disruptive than a four-week factory stoppage at Oriental Precision.[7]
By October 1990, Kalok secured US$15 million in equity financing from investors led by the giant Japanese conglomerateMitsubishi, which itself acquired a 19-percent ownership stake in Kalok and provided an additional US$8 million line of credit. Other participating investors includedOrix Group, a leading leasing firm in Japan, as well as two Japaneseventure capital firms: Techno-Venture Co. and Tokyo Venture Capital. Sunwestern Investment Group ofDallas, Texas, was erstwhile the sole U.S.-based investor in Kalok.[2]
Kalok's HDD sales peaked at US$80 million in 1990. The company went into precipitous decline in the early 1990s, with sales falling to $42,000 in 1992, from $60 million in 1991, largely due to Oriental Precision entering court receivership in South Korea and halting production of Kalok's HDDs.[8] The company also encountered critical bugs with theirASICs used on the controller boards of their HDDs, which led to slowed production and costly recalls.[9] As a consequence, Kalok soon found itself in the red by over $28 million.[8] Lockhart resigned as CEO in November 1992, replaced by Robert Martel.[9] In order to stave off its debt, Martel sold their Octagon brand of 40-, 80-, and 120-MB drives to the Xebec Japan Co. and divested its factory in the Philippines back to Ayala. Two foreign companies—DZU AD of Bulgaria andTEAC Corporation of Japan—together invested US$8 million to help revive Kalok.[8] Martel later resigned in June 1993, with David B. Pearce replacing him within this position.[1]
In 1994 Kalok went bankrupt and Pearce moved on to foundJT Storage Inc, another hard disk drive manufacturer withSirjang Lal Tandon and Tom Mitchel. JT Storage would continue engineering and development programs from the defunct Kalok Corporation.[10]
| Model no. | Gen. | Released | Capacity | Cache | Speed | Interface | Feature set | Sector Size | Notes | Product Page |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KL-230 | 1 | 2003 | 20MB | 3600 RPM | MFM,ST412 | – | 512 bytes | – | Specifications | |
| KL-320 | 21 MB | MFM,ST506 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-330 | 33MB | 3600 RPM | RLL,ST506 | 512 bytes | ||||||
| KL-332 | 1989 | 30 MB | ESDI | 512 bytes | ||||||
| KL-340 | 43 MB | MFM,ST506 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-341 | 1989 | 40 MB | 8 KB | 3600 RPM | SCSI-1 | 512 bytes | ||||
| KL-342 | 43 MB | RLL,ST506 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-343 | 1989 | 40 MB | RLL,ST506 | 512 bytes | ||||||
| KL-360 | 66 MB | RLL,ST506 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-381 | 85 MB | SCSI-1 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-383 | 85 MB | RLL,ST506 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| KL-3100 | 1991 | 105 MB | 32 KB | 3662 RPM | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | ||||
| KL-3120 | 121 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | |||||||
| P5-125A | 126 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | |||||||
| P5-125S | 126 MB | SCSI-2 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| P5-250A | 252 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | |||||||
| P5-250S | 252 MB | SCSI-2 | 512 bytes | |||||||
| K-Stor 250 | 250 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | |||||||
| K-Stor 360 | 360 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes | |||||||
| K-Stor 540 | 540 MB | Parallel ATA | 512 bytes |
One of their last offerings was a 100 megabyte 3.5-inch disk drive using astepper motor headactuator (rather than the servo-based voice coil operated actuators used on most drives of that density) and was very limited in both access speed and reliability. The drive was manufactured inIndia, and was commonly found in very inexpensive generic PCs.
In the early 1990s, Kalok also designed hard disks forTEAC[11][12] who used them as part of a removable hard disk drive system,[13] which was also sold under the Kalok name. After Kalok failed in 1994,JT Storage (JTS) hired its founder as their chief technical officer, and licensed the patents involved from TEAC and Pont Peripherals.[14]