Wellington is home to equestrian industry operations, agribusiness, medical (Wellington Regional Medical Center), professional services, and corporate offices. Wellington is one of the few cities in the United States where equestrian industry data is a meaningful enterprise concern. Horse syndication records, bloodline databases, equestrian competition data, and high-net-worth client information from the Winter Equestrian Festival economy all generate sensitive drive content. Add Wellington Regional Medical Center’s HIPAA-driven clinical workstation refresh, plus the professional services firms supporting the equestrian and agricultural economy, and Wellington produces a steady volume of drives requiring documented physical destruction.
Excess IT Hardware provides Wellington businesses with DIN 66399 certified hard drive shredding under two execution modes (on-site mobile shredding at your facility or witnessed off-site destruction at our processing center), serialized certificates of destruction, and complete chain-of-custody documentation that satisfies the regulatory frameworks driving HIPAA at Wellington Regional Medical Center, plus high-net-worth client data confidentiality requirements across the equestrian industry economy. For the master service framework, see our hard drive shredding service hub. For the broader Wellington service area, see our Palm Beach County hub.
DIN 66399 is the international destruction standard that defines particle-size specifications for physical media destruction. Hard drives have different requirements than solid state drives, and Excess IT Hardware shreds each to its specified standard:
Drive Type | DIN 66399 Standard | Particle Size |
HDD (mechanical hard drives) | H-4 | Maximum 320 mm² particle size. Suitable for HIPAA-protected health information, financial records, government data, and high-sensitivity business intelligence. |
SSD (solid state drives) | E-3 | Maximum 160 mm² particle size. SSDs require finer-particle destruction than HDDs because data is stored in NAND flash memory chips that retain recoverable data at larger particle sizes. |
Most commercial drive shredders are configured for HDD only and produce particle sizes too large for SSD destruction. Our equipment is configured for both standards, and SSDs are routed to E-3 specification shredding rather than being mixed with HDDs. For drive sanitization alternatives that preserve drive functionality (relevant when residual equipment value exists), see our on-site hard drive erasure and data erasure services. For physical destruction alternatives, see hard drive crushing.
Every Wellington hard drive shredding project closes with the documentation your compliance team will actually be asked to produce in an audit:
Step 1: Quote and scope. We confirm drive counts (HDDs and SSDs separated), execution mode preference, pickup location within Wellington, and compliance frameworks that apply. Quotes returned within 24 hours.
Step 2: Scheduling. Next-day pickup is typical for Wellington projects scoped in advance. Compliance-urgent projects (audit deadlines, breach response) expedited.
Step 3: Intake and serialization. Every drive scanned by serial number at intake. HDDs and SSDs separated and routed to their respective destruction specifications.
Step 4: DIN 66399 destruction. HDDs shredded to H-4 specification. SSDs shredded to E-3 specification. Each event timestamped and logged to the closeout package.
Step 5: Certificate and material recovery. Serialized certificate of destruction issued. Shred material routed to material recovery (metals, circuit boards, plastics separated for downstream recycling).
Wellington hard drive shredding engagements run in one of two modes depending on your security policy, project size, and witness requirements:
Execution Mode | What Happens | Best Fit |
On-Site Mobile Shredding | Our mobile shredding truck arrives at your Wellington facility. Drives are scanned by serial number on intake, shredded to DIN 66399 H-4 or E-3 specification on the truck, and shred material is hauled to processing for material recovery. Your team can witness every step. | Projects where drives cannot leave your custody, security policy mandates on-site destruction, or your team requires direct witnessing of each drive |
Witnessed Off-Site Destruction | Drives are sealed under signed manifest at your Wellington facility, transported to our processing center, and shredded to DIN 66399 specification with your designated witness (or video witness) present. Serialized certificates issued at completion. | Larger volume projects where on-site destruction would take excessive time, multi-location consolidation where drives across Wellington sites get destroyed together, or projects with cost sensitivity |
Excess IT Hardware provides certified hard drive shredding for Wellington businesses in two modes: on-site mobile shredding at your facility (a mobile shredding truck arrives at your Wellington address, drives are shredded on the truck while you witness, and the shred material is hauled away for material recovery) or witnessed off-site destruction at our South Florida processing center (drives sealed under signed manifest at your Wellington facility, transported to our processing center, and shredded to DIN 66399 specification with your designated witness or video witness present). Both modes produce serialized certificates of destruction. Next-day pickup is standard for Wellington projects. Request a quote through the contact form or call (561) 600-8656.
DIN 66399 H-4 specifies a maximum particle size of 320 mm² for hard drive (HDD) destruction. This particle size meets HIPAA requirements for protected health information, GLBA requirements for financial customer data, GDPR for European data subjects, and FIPA for Florida personal information. H-4 is the appropriate standard for nearly all commercial destruction requirements. For solid state drives (SSDs), the equivalent standard is DIN 66399 E-3, which mandates a smaller maximum particle size of 160 mm² because SSDs store data in NAND flash memory chips that retain recoverable data at larger particle sizes than HDDs. If your organization’s policy requires destruction to a higher classification (DIN 66399 H-5 for national security or H-6 for top-secret information), we can scope to those standards on request, though those classifications are rarely required outside of government or defense contractors.
The compliance framework depends on your industry. For Wellington, the typical drivers are HIPAA at Wellington Regional Medical Center, plus high-net-worth client data confidentiality requirements across the equestrian industry economy. Other frameworks that may apply across Wellington engagements include HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, healthcare engagements), GLBA (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, financial services), SOX (Sarbanes-Oxley, publicly traded companies), PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard, retail and hospitality with payment processing), FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, education), and FIPA (Florida Information Protection Act, personal information). For the HIPAA-specific framework in Florida, see our HIPAA-compliant IT disposal in Florida guide. Documentation is calibrated per-engagement to satisfy the frameworks that actually apply to your Wellington business.
The decision depends on what happens to the drive afterward. Hard drive shredding (DIN 66399 H-4 / E-3) physically destroys the drive: the drive becomes non-functional and the data is destroyed beyond any recovery method. Shredding is required for drives carrying the highest-sensitivity data, drives that failed sanitization verification, or drives where your policy or compliance framework mandates physical destruction. Hard drive erasure (NIST 800-88 Clear or Purge) is software- or firmware-based sanitization that preserves drive functionality. After successful erasure, the drive can be remarketed, donated, or redeployed. Erasure is appropriate for drives with residual market value where the equipment still has years of useful life. Most enterprise programs use a hybrid approach: erasure where the drive has residual value, shredding where it does not. For more on this decision, see our data erasure and hard drive crushing services and the master data destruction services hub.
Yes. Large-volume shredding engagements are a core engagement type. The workflow scales from a single-office cleanout (typically 25 to 200 drives) to enterprise refresh programs (1,000+ drives across multiple sites and facilities). For multi-location Wellington programs, drives from every site get logged into one master serialized inventory, destroyed to the same DIN 66399 specification, and consolidated into a single closeout package. For very high-volume engagements (5,000+ drives), we typically recommend witnessed off-site destruction at our processing center because on-site mobile shredding becomes time-prohibitive at that scale. Data center decommissioning projects often include a high-volume drive shredding component, which is scoped together with the rest of the decommissioning workflow.
Certified destruction. Two execution modes. Documentation built for the compliance frameworks that actually apply to your Wellington business. For a quote on your specific project, request a Wellington shredding quote online or call (561) 600-8656.