Reviews & Opinions
Independent and trusted. Read before buy Iomega ZIP 250 USB!

Iomega ZIP 250 USB


Bookmark
Iomega ZIP 250 USB

Bookmark and Share

 

Iomega ZIP 250 USBIomega ZIP 250 - MB ZIP drive - USB - External

PC, Mac, 1 year warranty

Now it's even easier to take your Zip drive zipping around town. With its USB cable that provides both data and power, the new Zip 250MB USB Powered Drive does not need an external power source. At only nine ounces, you can take it anywhere and everywhere. And, the sleek new design will have you showing it off to all your jealous friends.
[ Report abuse or wrong photo | Share your Iomega ZIP 250 USB photo ]

 

 

Manual

Preview of first few manual pages (at low quality). Check before download. Click to enlarge.
Manual - 1 page  Manual - 2 page  Manual - 3 page 

Download (English)
Iomega ZIP 250 USB, size: 857 KB

 

Iomega ZIP 250 USB

 

 

Video review

TOP 10 Best Buy Zip Drives in January 2011

 

User reviews and opinions

<== Click here to post a new opinion, comment, review, etc.

Comments to date: 8. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
henrik.uggla 9:43am on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 
I love red color. I take this stylish ruby red rugged for all my travels. It is compact and quick. I cannot use the encryption feature to transfer my classified files on the corporate intranet network.
veruska 6:42pm on Monday, October 11th, 2010 
highly recommend this product easy install, small footprint, good looking product none so far My husband LOVED this gift! Giant storage capability - you can back up the Universe on this thing! Very good service Excelente response time none
PipoDeClown 1:25am on Friday, September 24th, 2010 
I am mostly on move for business. I carry lots of data every time and this drive is my constant partner. I was intending to buy a network storage that offers content sharing with advanced security.
jjyuff6 11:01pm on Tuesday, September 14th, 2010 
Great for marking disks. Easy To Read Print,Glides Smoothly,Good Colors,Ink Applies Evenly,Ink Dries Quickly,Long Lasting Ink Works fine Easy To Install
OpenRsa 4:08am on Wednesday, August 11th, 2010 
I am a mobile DJ and I purchased this because many of my gigs are set in a dark atmosphere. This product works perfectly. I did my research around and until now iomega has this media player that competes with WD player.
kshemankar 5:21pm on Saturday, June 5th, 2010 
Wealth of Features, Built Like a Tank, Screaming Fast Horrifically Flawed Software VERY RELIABLE ALSO ONLY PAID $95.00 AT WWW.NETS-INC.NET NONE
peterp 10:34pm on Tuesday, June 1st, 2010 
The bold colors really make your labels stick out and the variety allows for visibility and easier organizing. Easy To Read Print,Good Colors.
sysop 5:51am on Friday, March 26th, 2010 
The zip format is very convenient. I have been using them for years. I used to mail the 100mb disks overseas in just an envelope without a problem.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc0

100MB_ZIP

30-11-1999 15:01

Pagina 1

100MB Zip drive

If its worth doing, its worth saving
The Original Superfloppy Drive
70 floppies with your valuable files fit onto 1 Zip 100MB disk, thats why more than 30 million drives and 180 million disks have been sold. The affordable classic Zip 100MB drive is used like a floppy, but works like a hard drive. Just connect it to your desktop and load the Iomega software its as simple as that.
Convenient connections for your computer
The Zip 100MB Parallel Port drive connects to all Windows 95/98 and NT enabled PCs. Complete with pass-through feature, you can connect both your Zip 100MB Parallel Port drive and printer to the same Parallel Port interface. The Zip 100MB USB drive connects to any USB enabled desktop or notebook computer. An internal (ATAPI) drive is also available.
Save, transport, share and secure valuable files
Zip disks provide safe and affordable storage for your important files. Use them to secure data whenever you want. Take hundreds of megabytes of data home, on the road, to the next office. Or, you can overnight large files to remote co-workers and outside business partners.

Pagina 2

PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS:
29 millisecond seek time USB model: Up to 0.7MB per second transfer rate Parallel Port model: Up to 0.6MB per second transfer rate Atapi model: Up to 1.4MB per second transfer rate Automatic low-power mode saves energy One-year limited warranty on drive Five-year limited warranty on disks 100MB Zip disks sold separately
What can you do with Zip drives and disks?
If you need more disk space, carry around lots of data, like to work at home or on the road, or share files with partners, a Zip drive is an essential tool. Here are just a few of the things you can do with your Zip disks:

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:

PC users
USB model: Pentium 100 or higher with built-in USB controller, Windows 98 Parallel Port model: Pentium 100 or higher; Windows 95 / 98 / NT 4.0 (service pack 3 or higher) Atapi model: Pentium 100 or higher; available IDE controller with free connection; Windows 95b or higher / 98 / NT 4.0 (service pack 3 or higher)

capture

Internet downloads 300 to 800 digital images Up to 100 minutes of MP3 audio on a single 100MB Zip disk!

create

An automatic backup of your important files using Iomega QuikSync software Copies of your best work An archive for all your files (e-mail, client files, pictures, audio and video clips)

MAC users

USB model: Apple iMac or PowerMacintosh computer with built-in USB connection, MacOS 8.1 or higher Atapi model: PowerMacintosh G4 / G3 (blue and white G3 only) with available 3.5" or 5.25" drive, MacOS 8.5 or higher bay

connect

And share information with co-workers, clients, and service bureaus To 30 million Zip drives sold worldwide
For Software Installation
2X CD-ROM drive 8MB of RAM to run software 30MB hard drive space
Additional system requirements to install and use RecordIt software
For PC: Pentium 100 or higher; Windows 95 / 98 For Mac: PowerPC processor and Mac OS 7.6.1 or higher 8X CD-ROM drive to record CD music 16MB of RAM to run software Industry standard sound card
Besides creating new files, always back up your work using Zip. Iomega QuickSync is the easiest to make an automatic and simultanous back up of your important files.
Zip 100MB USB Drive #30021 #30020 (UK)
Zip 100MB Parallel Port Drive #SM138100* #SN138100** #SU138100 (UK)
Zip 100MB Atapi Drive #230700

www.iomega-europe.com

Distributed in The Americas by: Distributed Outside The Americas by:
Iomega Corporation 1821 West Iomega Way Roy, Utah 84067, USA

Zip100FAM/UK/00132

Iomega International SA Morgines Business Centre 12, Avenue des Morgines 1213 Geneva, Switzerland
100MB capacity where 1MB = 1 million bytes. The capacity reported by your operating system may vary. It may be a criminal offense under applicable copyright laws to make unauthorized copies of copyright-protected material, including computer programs, films, broadcasts, and non-original sound recordings. This equipment should not be used for such purposes. Actual sound quality obtained with RecordIt software will depend on your CD-ROM drive, microphone, sound card and source used during recording. *English, French, German text on box **English, Italian, Spanish text on box Copyright 1999 Iomega Corporation. The following trademarks of Iomega are registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademarks Office and in other countries: Iomega, Zip, RecordIt, and the RecordIt logo. Some other marks which may be registered in some countries are: The SuperFloppy Preferred by Millions, Zip 100, Zip 250, Zip 100 brand block, Zip 250 brand block, IomegaWare. Certain other product names, brand names and company names may be trademarks or designations of their respective owners.

doc1

Zip Drive MiniHOWTO

Table of Contents
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO.....1 Kyle Dansie, dansie@ibm.net....1. 1. Introduction.....1 2. Quick Start....1 3. Configuring a kernel for the ZIP drive...1 4. The ZIP drive.....1 5. Troubleshooting Install....1 6. Using the ZIP drive....1 7. Performance.....1 8. Frequently asked questions....2 9. Getting more current information...2 1. Introduction.....2 1.1 Home of this document.....2 2. Quick Start....3 3. Configuring a kernel for the ZIP drive...3 3.1 SCSI version....4 4. The ZIP drive.....5 4.1 Parallel port version Zip100....5 4.2 SCSI external version....6 The ZIP ZOOM host adapter....7 4.3 The SCSI Internal version....7 4.4 The ZIP Plus IMM driver....8 4.5 ATAPI version.....9 4.6 IDE version.....9 4.7 USB version.....9 4.8 ZIP250 version....10 5. Troubleshooting Install.....10 6. Using the ZIP drive....10 6.1 Fdisk, mke2fs, mount, etc....11 6.2 An existing DOS formatted disk....11 6.3 Reformat as a native Linux disk....11 6.4 fstab entries....12 6.5 The ZIP Tools disk....12 7. Performance.....12 8. Frequently asked questions....13 8.1 Can I plug a printer into the parallel ZIP drive ?....13 8.2 Do you plan to support EPP/ECP ports in PPA ?...13 8.3 Can I run Linux from a ZIP drive ?....14 8.4 Can I boot from the ZIP drive ?...14 8.5 Why does Iomega use partition number 4 ?...14 8.6 How can I have the disk mounted at boot time ?...14 8.7 What happens if there is no disk inserted when I boot ?...14 8.8 Can I use the parallel drive as a real SCSI disk ?...15 8.9 Can PPA be used with Iomega's parallel port tape drives ?...15 8.10 Will PPA work with the parallel port SyQuest EZ135 ?...15 9. Getting more current information....15
Kyle Dansie, dansie@ibm.net

v2.5, 07 March 2002

This Document provides a quick reference quide on setting up and using the Iomega ZIP drive with Linux.

1. Introduction

1.1 Home of this document
2. Quick Start 3. Configuring a kernel for the ZIP drive

3.1 SCSI version

4. The ZIP drive
4.1 Parallel port version Zip100 4.2 SCSI external version 4.3 The SCSI Internal version 4.4 The ZIP Plus IMM driver 4.5 ATAPI version 4.6 IDE version 4.7 USB version 4.8 ZIP250 version
5. Troubleshooting Install 6. Using the ZIP drive
6.1 Fdisk, mke2fs, mount, etc. 6.2 An existing DOS formatted disk 6.3 Reformat as a native Linux disk 6.4 fstab entries 6.5 The ZIP Tools disk

7. Performance

8. Frequently asked questions
8.1 Can I plug a printer into the parallel ZIP drive ? 8.2 Do you plan to support EPP/ECP ports in PPA ? 8.3 Can I run Linux from a ZIP drive ? 8.4 Can I boot from the ZIP drive ? 8.5 Why does Iomega use partition number 4 ? 8.6 How can I have the disk mounted at boot time ? 8.7 What happens if there is no disk inserted when I boot ? 8.8 Can I use the parallel drive as a real SCSI disk ? 8.9 Can PPA be used with Iomega's parallel port tape drives ? 8.10 Will PPA work with the parallel port SyQuest EZ135 ?
9. Getting more current information 1. Introduction
The Iomega ZIP drive is a popular, removable media disk drive. It is avaliable in several versions. Parallel Port SCSI IDE ATAPI Plus The most popular seems to be the Parallel port version. It has been around a long time and it is low cost. The SCSI version has also been around for a while but it needs a scsi card that many people do not have already, so it it not quite as popular. The ATAPI version now seems to be more available. The Plus is the newer version of the ZIP drive. It has the capability to detect what port its plugged into, scsi or parallel. This document will focus on the Parallel port version, but also offer some tips for other versions. This document incorporates information collected and published by others, in particular: Grant Guenther, grant@torque.net Scot Wilcoxon, sewilco@fielday.mn.org Joe Mack, mack@ncifcrf.gov Byron Jeff, byron@cc.gatech.edu I thank them for their important contributions, and accept responsibility for any errors that I have introduced. A special thanks to Grant Guenther who wrote the 0.26 version of the ppa program and also wrote the original version of this HOWTO. If you find any mistakes or oversights in this document, please let me know. dansie@ibm.net
1.1 Home of this document

The most current version of this document will reside at http://www.njtcom.com/dansie/zipdrive.html

2. Quick Start

OK so you have purchased a new zip drive and now you want to use it. Some distributions have the modules already built. You can try insmod ppa for starters. (Make sure you have it hooked up and a disk inserted). If the ppa program is not there, then configure the kernel. My machine has 2 parallel ports, one for the zip and one for the printer. This makes things easy, no cable switching. Configure the kernel: cd /usr/src/linux make xconfig scsi support = Y scsi disk support = Y Iomega zip support as a module printer support also as a module save it and exit make dep make clean make zImage or zlilo or zdisk make modules make modules_install Now to use the drive: load the module insmod ppa build a mounting point. mkdir /zip insert a preformatted windoze type disk into the drive. mount the disk. mount t vfat /dev/sda4 /zip use any standard file commands as in l /zip, ls /zip, df, cp, when you are finished umount /zip If you had trouble with any of the previous steps, see the following sections for more detailed instructions.
3. Configuring a kernel for the ZIP drive
To use the ZIP drive with Linux, you must have a kernel configured with support for the SCSI system, support for SCSI disks, and support for the host adapter you are using. If you are not familiar with building a kernel, you should read up on the Linux Kernel HOWTO for information. You must begin the process of building a kernel with the configuration step. Here, you identify the specific kernel components that you need. First step cd /usr/src/linux. There are several ways to actually do the configuration. Under X windows I use make xconfig. There is also make menuconfig or make config for command line prompts. The easiest way is with xconfig. In the section SCSI Support set SCSI support = Y. Also set SCSI disk support = Y. In the section SCSI lowlevel drivers you want to set IOMEGA Parallel Port ZIP drive SCSI support = M. The M stands for modules. 2. Quick Start 3
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO In the section Character Devices find and set Parallell Printer support = M If you are a bit unsure about any of this, use zdisk for the make step. This will build and install the kernel to floppy. If you screw it up somehow, you still have a good bootable system on the hard drive. Now build the kernel with these steps: make dep make clean make zImage or zlilo or zdisk make modules make mdoules_install hint if you want to create an output log of the make zImage step you can use

make zImage 2>&1 | tee zImage.out
This is really a good thing to do, if you have compile errors or other conflicts in the configuration, now you have a file with the error messages or compile errors. This makes asking for help much easier. You also need to load the modules somewhere. On my system I just added a couple of lines to the boot.local file. insmod ppa insmod lp My system is Suse 5.3 and this file is in /etc/rc.d. The location of this file will vary by distribution, but there will be a file somewhere, for local changes to be made at start up time. You should use the file that is applicable for your distribution. Now shutdown and reboot. You can also build all or part of the SCSI system as modules. If you do this, be sure to load scsi.o, then sd.o and finally the driver for your host adapter, before you try to access the ZIP drive.

3.1 SCSI version

If you already have a SCSI disk in your system, and you are connecting the ZIP drive to the same controller, there is no additional kernel configuration required. Otherwise, you will most likely have to build a new kernel. If you are building a kernel to support the SCSI version of the ZIP drive, you should select SCSI support and SCSI disk support. You must also select a driver for the interface card you will use. If you have a ZIP Zoom, select the aha152x driver. Be sure to read the documentation for your adapter in the SCSI HOWTO and any README files in the drivers/scsi subdirectory of the Linux source tree. Pay attention to command line parameters that you might have to use to help the kernel initialise your adapter. For instance, if you are using the ZIP Zoom card, you will have to add something like

aha152x=0x340,11,7,1

to the boot command (or include it in your /etc/lilo.conf file in an append clause). This tells the driver the port address and IRQ of your ZIP Zoom card be sure to use the numbers that correspond to the way your jumpers are set. You should also read Paul Gortmaker's BOOTPROMPT HOWTO for information about configuring your kernel with LILO or LOADLIN.
There are at least five or six versions of the Iomega ZIP 100 drive. The Iomega page for these drives is at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/ They all accept special cartridges resembling a 3.5" floppy disk that hold 100 megabytes of data. The disks actually hold 96 cylinders of 2048 sectors each holding 512 bytes. This would normally be called 96 Megabytes. The external drive comes in these types: Parallel port SCSI Plus The internal drive comes in these types: SCSI IDE ATAPI The internal versions can be mounted in 3.5 or 5.25 drive slots. The external versions are in a small blue plastic case enclosure, powered by an external wall brick. All the drives have a large pushbutton on the front of the drive. This is used to eject the disk. Linux locks the door while using the drive, but if the button is pressed while the door is locked, the ZIP drive will remember and eject the disk as soon as the software unlocks it.

4.1 Parallel port version Zip100
This drive is described at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/zippp.html The Linux driver comes in a couple of different versions. The 0.26 version of the ppa.c program ships standard with the 2.0.x kernels. If your kernel is older than 2.0.35 then you have the OLD program. Check out David Campbell's page for the more current version of this program. At the time of this writing the current version is 1.42. The auto configuration features of the 1.4x program are very nice. You do NOT have to tell the progam what the base address of the parallel port is. The program will prob the standard address's for the parallel ports and attach the drive when it finds it. 4. The ZIP drive 5
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO The most common problem is to load the lp printer module before the ppa program. The ppa program must be loaded before the lp module. The lp module will tie up the port that the zip drive needs, this is why the ppa progam must be loaded first. Also be sure that all cables are firmly attached. If you did everything right :) you will see messages like this at boot time.
VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly. Adding Swap: 102528k swapspace (priority 1) ppa: Version 1.42 ppa: Probing port 03bc ppa: Probing port 0378 ppa: SPP port present ppa: EPP 1.9 with hardware direction protocol ppa: Found device at ID 6, Attempting to use EPP 32 bit ppa: Communication established with ID 6 using EPP 32 bit ppa: Probing port 0278 ppa: SPP port present scsi0 : Iomega parport ZIP drive scsi : 1 host. Vendor: IOMEGA Model: ZIP 100 Rev: D.09 Type: DirectAccess ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Detected scsi removable disk sda at scsi0, channel 0, id 6, lun 0 SCSI device sda: hdwr sector= 512 bytes. Sectors= 196608 [96 MB] [0.1 GB] sda: Write Protect is off sda: sda4 lp2 at 0x0278, (polling)
You can view these messages with dmesg | more. You can save the messages to a file with dmesg > dmesg.txt. This is often usefull if you are trying to debug the installation. Also see section Getting more information
4.2 SCSI external version
This drive is described at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/zipscsi.html The external SCSI version of the ZIP drive has two DB25F connectors, and two configuration switches. One switch selects the drive's target address. The choice is limited to target 5 or 6. The other enables an internal terminator, in case the drive is the last one on a chain. The 25 pin SCSI connectors use the familiar Macintosh style wiring. The drive is shipped with a Macintosh type cable, but standard cables and converters are easily obtained if you are using a host adapter with a Centronics or highdensity connector. I have not seen an internal SCSI drive, but I would expect it to have a standard 50 pin DIP header SCSI connector and the same two switches. Make sure that the target address you choose does not conflict with any other SCSI devices you may have on the same bus. Also be sure that the physically last drive in a chain has termination enabled, or an external terminator installed. If you have an internal SCSI disk or CDrom, and you connect your ZIP drive to the existing adapter, you should check to see if there are any terminators on the card that must be removed. Only the two extreme ends 4.2 SCSI external version 6

Zip Drive MiniHOWTO of the SCSI bus should be terminated. If your bus is partly internal and partly external, there should be one terminator on the last external device and one on the last internal device, but no terminators on the adapter card itself. Be sure that all cables are firmly attached. The kernel configuration is much the same as the internel version. See the next section SCSI Internal version for an example configuration.
The ZIP ZOOM host adapter
Iomega markets a SCSI host adapter under the name ZIP Zoom. This is actually based on the design of the Adaptec AHA1520 family of adapters. It has an external Macintosh type DB25F connector, compatible with the cable that comes with the ZIP drive. Linux supports this adapter with the aha152x driver.
4.3 The SCSI Internal version
Install hardware as described in the "Installation and Reference Guide" noting which SCSI ID, IRQ and I/O Port Address are being used. (You'll need this info later.) Things will go smother if the drive and adapter card use different SCSI ID's. Beware The zip zoom card is hardwired for scsi ID number 7. The scsi id in the command line below is for the card, not the drive. The card and the drive must use different scsi id numbers. For example if the card uses 7 then use 5 or some other number for the drive. Recompile the kernel after configuring it to include 'SCSI', 'SCSI disk' and 'AHA152X/2825' support. INSTALL NEW KERNEL :( Determine what your kernel command line is: aha152x=[I/O Port][,IRQ][,SCSI ID][,RECONNECT][,PARITY] For example : aha152x=0x140,10,7,1 If your using LILO add your kernel command line to your lilo.conf file using the append command. (ie. append = "aha152x=0x140,10,7,1") If your using LOADLIN add your kernel command line to the command you use to initiate loadlin.
(ie. loadlin c:\vmlinuz root=/dev/hda3 aha152x=0x140,10,5,1 ro)
4.4 The ZIP Plus IMM driver
This drive is described at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/zipplus.html This is a newer version of the external Zip drive. The Zip Plus does not use the ppa driver, instead it uses the imm driver. Philippe Andersson sent in this excellent section on the imm driver for the Zip Plus. Thanks Philippe. First, rebuild your kernel to include the following items: modules support SCSI support SCSI Disk support lp as a module (if you need it) You'll notice we didn't select any SCSI lowlevel driver. That's ok we'll build it separately later. Then, you need to get the driver source code from Dave Campbell's home page ( http://www.torque.net/~campbell/imm.tar.gz). Version 0.18 is the current one at the time of writing (Aug. 98). Unzip it and untar it somewhere (under /usr/src, for instance). Then just run make. You'll get the module you need (imm.o). Copy it to

/lib/modules/$(uname r)/scsi
. If your lp module was loaded (check with lsmod(1)), unload it (rmmod lp), then load imm.o (insmod imm) and you're all set basically. If the ZIP drive was not connected and powered on at the time, you'll get the message "init_module: Device or resource busy", and the module won't load. (By the way, it looks like you don't need to switch your PC off to connect the ZIP just make sure the module is not loaded and the drive is turned off, then plug it in, turn the drive on, and load the module.) If the ZIP was connected and powered on, but there was no disk in, the module will load all right, but you'll get the message that it can't read the disk partition table. This is ok, as the partition table will be automatically read when you insert a ZIP disk. If there was a ZIP disk in, you'll get the full information displayed, including a list of partitions defined on the disk and its Write Protect status. Here is a sample loadtime message:
vger:~# insmod imm imm: Version 0.18 imm: Probing port 03bc imm: Probing port 0378 imm: SPP port present imm: ECP with a 16 byte FIFO present imm: PS/2 bidirectional port present imm: Passed Intel bug check. imm: Probing port 0278 scsi0 : Iomega ZIP Plus drive scsi : 1 host. Vendor: IOMEGA Model: ZIP 100 PLUS

Rev: J.66

Type: DirectAccess ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Detected scsi removable disk sda at scsi0, channel 0, id 6, lun 0 SCSI device sda: hdwr sector= 512 bytes. Sectors= 196608 [96 MB] [0.1 GB] sda: Write Protect is off sda: sda1 vger:~#
One last remark to mention that this version of the driver also locks the drive door while the disk is mounted. If the eject button is pressed in this situation, nothing happens, but the drive "remembers" and ejects the disk as soon as it is dismounted.

4.5 ATAPI version

This drive is described at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/zipatapi.html There was an IDE version of the drive produced for a while. I think that for the most part this has been replaced by the ATAPI version. Donald Stidwell sent in these comments on the ATAPI version. Thanks Don. I use an ATAPI Zip drive and it works with both 2.0.32 and 2.0.33 kernels. I've used it under both RH 5.0 and OpenLinux 1.2 (my current used distribution). To get it to work under OpenLinux, I just enabled ATAPI floppy support in the kernel. OpenLinux does not have this support compiled in by default. No other drivers are needed. It will mount as an extended partition on partition 4. I.E, mine mounts on HDB4. I mount it under /mnt/zip as noauto, although I don't suppose there would be any real problem with automounting. I just wonder about ejecting disks. I always dismount the drive before ejecting a cartridge. There are more detailed instructions for the ATAPI install in the Linux Gazette May 1998 issue. See the 2 cent tip section.

<url url="http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue28/lg_tips28.html#atapi">

4.6 IDE version

I have not used the IDE version. Eric Backus sent in these comments. Thanks Eric. I have one of these. It came with my Gateway 2000 computer a year ago. I think most of these were shipped by large OEM companies like this, before the ATAPI version of the ZIP drive was available. The good news about this drive: no kernel modules or modifications are needed to support it. It looks to the kernel like an IDE hard drive. It worked for me with no effort with kernel 2.0.31 and 2.0.32. The bad news about this drive: because it doesn't use ATAPI, you can't use the SCSItoATAPI translation, which means you can't use mtools to writeprotect disks (or to eject them, for that matter).

4.7 USB version

This drive is described at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/imac.html
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO These drives look very cool and the USB interface also looks good. The only problem is that the USB interface for Linux is still under development at this time. So for now, this drive is not usable under Linux. Check this address for updates. http://peloncho.fis.ucm.es/~inaky/USB/news.html

4.8 ZIP250 version

This drive is desribed at http://www.iomega.com/product/zip/zip250.html This drive is new as of January 1999. I just bought one of these and it works very well in Linux. Just use the IMM driver from http://www.torque.net/~campbell/imm.tar.gz Set up the driver the same way as the zip plus. Mainly just download the driver, unpack it, and run make. Then copy the imm.o executable to the modules directory. For example /lib/modules/2.0.35/scsi (The 2.0.35 is your kernel version). If you are not sure of the version do uname r.
5. Troubleshooting Install
If you get errors while giving insmod ppa as given below:
root# insmod ppa Using /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o: unresolved symbol parport_register_device_Rf274b8 /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o: unresolved symbol parport_release_Rf8ec22de /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o: unresolved symbol parport_claim_R4c7222c6 /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o: unresolved symbol parport_enumerate_Rbc847709 /lib/modules/version/kernel/drivers/scsi/ppa.o: Note: modules without a GPL compatible license ca
The problem is that you did not add a printer to your system in 'Printer Configuration'. Before you do 'insmod ppa' you MUST add a printer. Click on KDEStartButton>System>PrinterConfig and add a printer by name 'sometestprinter' using /dev/lp0 (or lp1, lp2 check the output from dmesg | more). Now, test the printer which you added by giving: /etc/rc.d/init.d/lpd restart. If the lpd daemon starts then the printer is configured properly. Now try

bash# insmod ppa bash# insmod lp
You should not get any errors.

6. Using the ZIP drive

If you have built in all the required components, the kernel should recognize your adapter and drive at boot time. If you are using a loadable module for your driver, the following discussion applies once that module is loaded. 4.8 ZIP250 version 10
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO For the most part, the SCSI and parallel versions of the drive behave identically, except that the parallel version is somewhat slower.
6.1 Fdisk, mke2fs, mount, etc.
Once you know the drive name for your ZIP drive, you are set. You can manipulate the drive with the normal Linux disk management commands. fdisk (or perhaps cfdisk) is used to manipulate the partition tables on the disk. mke2fs can be used to format a partition with the ext2 filesystem the one most commonly used in Linux. mount is used to connect a formatted partition into your directory hierarchy. You should study the manual pages for these tools if you are not familiar with them. Be warned that there are now several quite different versions of the fdisk program be careful. I'll describe two common scenarios.
6.2 An existing DOS formatted disk
If you have a ZIP disk with a DOS file structure that was originally created by Iomega's tools, the partition scan should say that the disk has one partition, /dev/sda4. You should make a place to mount the disk, lets say /zip, and then mount it as an MSDOS filesystem:
mkdir /zip mount t vfat /dev/sda4 /zip
You could also use msdos instead of vfat. vfat supports long filenames where msdos does not. Now, the files on the disk should appear in /zip. While the disk is mounted, you will not be able to remove it. When you are finished with the disk you can umount it to release it and detach it from your directory hierarchy.

umount /zip

Once you've made the /zip mount point you don't need to do it again, so you could come back later and mount something else there.
6.3 Reformat as a native Linux disk
If you want to erase a ZIP disk and make a Linux native file system on it. You should use fdisk on the entire disk:

fdisk /dev/sda

and delete any existing partitions (with the d command). Then create a new partition with the n command, make it primary partition number 1, use w to write the partition table to disk, and quit with q. Format the partition

mke2fs /dev/sda1

(The 1 is the number that you gave this partition in fdisk). Now you can mount the disk:
mount t ext2 /dev/sda1 /zip
(reusing that mount point we created before).

6.4 fstab entries

The /etc/fstab allows you to configure the mount command. I like to be able to mount and write to the zip disk from any login id on the system. I added 2 lines to the end of the fstab file that look like this.
/dev/sda1 /dev/sda4 /zip /zipdos ext2 vfat noauto,rw,user,nosuid,sync noauto,rw,user,nosuid,sync,mode=0777
These entries assume that you have a /zip and a /zipdos directory. If you want all users ids to read and write, make sure you set the permissions. For exmaple chmod 666 /zip. You must do the chmod as root. The fstab entries also assume that your dos disks are partitioned as 4 (sda4 in my case), and the ext2(linux) disks are partitoned as 1 (sda1). You can read more about the fstab options with man mount With the fstab entries as above you can mount a dos disk with mount /zipdos If you are using a linux ext2 disk then use the command mount /zip

6.5 The ZIP Tools disk

There is some extra work to be done if you want to use the disk that comes with the ZIP drive. As shipped, the software controlled write protection is enabled. Most people have unlocked the disk under DOS before ever trying to use it with Linux. Linux cannot access a locked disk, and it must be unlocked with Iomega's tools. A native Linux program to manage the write protection feature, among other things, is expected to be available soon.
With the standard version of the 2.0.x kernels you get the 0.26 version of the ppa.c program. This is a very reliable simple program. It has gotten a lot of use and abuse and held up rather well. The only bad thing about this program is that it's not very fast. On my machine I have version 2.0.30 kernel, and 2 parallel ports. This is also a lowbuck machine pentium meg memory, 5 gig maxtor eide hard drive. The machine cost me 500. U.S. Dollars and the drive was 250. I am cheap but so what. I had the ZIP drive on the second port and the printer on the first port. The second port was an old add in card, no epp mode. This made the driver run in 4 bit mode. To base line the performance I copied the netscape tar file from the hard drive to the zip drive. This file is about 10.6 meg. Time 7 minutes 15 seconds. Going from the zip drive to the hard drive was about 7 minutes even. Not exactly setting the world on fire. I then made 2 changes. First I switched the ZIP drive to the first port and went into the bios and set EPP mode on for the first port. At the same time I hooked up the printer to the 2nd port.

Zip Drive MiniHOWTO Second change I went out and downloaded the new version of the program from David Campbells page Then I installed this program. Check out the readme file that is included. Then I ran the same test again of copying the Netscape tar file to and from the ZiP drive. The copy to the C drive was 1:55 seconds. From the hard drive to the Zip drive was 1 minute flat. This compares to 7:15 and 7:00 with the old program. This was a big improvement over the 0.26 program. This was also using the zip drive as a vfat file type. Next I formated a zip drive in ext2 format. Ran the same test again. The copy going to the hard drive was only 50 seconds. The copy from the hard drive to the Zip drive was only 40 seconds. Performance Summary For this test case of moving a 10.6 meg file, the 4 bit standard port mode and program version 0.26 is the slowest 7:00 and 7:15 The new program (1.41) and EPP mode with ext2 file types is the fastest at 50 seconds and 40 seconds.
These are some of the questions that we get asked a lot. Please read the answers here before asking them again !
8.1 Can I plug a printer into the parallel ZIP drive ?
Yes, but. Currently, you cannot have both the lp and ppa drivers active on the same parallel port. A resource sharing protocol has been designed and is in the early stages of implementation, but will not be available before Linux 2.0 is released. If you like living on the bleeding edge of things, get the 2.1.x kernel and you can have port sharing. See http://www.cyberelk.demon.co.uk/parport.html The easy way to do this with 2.0.x kernel is to have 2 parallel ports. I bought my second one for about 15 dollars and it works great. You can use one for printing and one for your ZIP drive. Just build a kernel with both the lp and ppa drivers as modules. I use the newer (1.41) version of ppa, so I just load ppa first (insmod ppa). It then finds the zip drive on the first port. Then I load lp (insmod lp) and it assigns the printer to the second port. If you use the 0.26 version of the program then upgrade to 1.41 or newer. The only answer you will get on qustions about this driver is to upgrade the program.

8.2 Do you plan to support EPP/ECP ports in PPA ?
Version 0.26 of the program does not support EPP. Version 1.41 does support the EPP. This program is also much faster. See the performance section for more details.
8.3 Can I run Linux from a ZIP drive ?
People have done this. It would seem this might make a great rescue disk or a way to test an install. http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/mini/ZIPInstall.html
8.4 Can I boot from the ZIP drive ?
This depends on what you are using for a host adapter. If your host adapter has a BIOS ROM with code that can boot from target 5 or 6, then yes, you can boot from the SCSI ZIP drive. You cannot boot from a parallel port drive. If you have DOS on your main disk and want to boot Linux from a ZIP disk, you can do this using the LOADLIN boot loader. Your kernel image must be somewhere on the DOS disk, but the rest of your Linux system could be on the ZIP. Make sure that the kernel you use has the correct drivers built in. As far as I am aware, there are no installation boot floppies for any of the popular distributions that contain the parallel ZIP driver.
8.5 Why does Iomega use partition number 4 ?
This is one of the most popular questions, but I don't think anyone has a definite answer to this one. Could be they had their head where the sun don't shine. Maybe there is no reason.
8.6 How can I have the disk mounted at boot time ?
All you need to do is to add a line to your /etc/fstab file. For instance, if you will always have a DOS disk in the drive when you boot, you could put
/dev/sda4 /zip vfat defaults 0 0
in the fstab. Depending on your distribution, the initialization scripts might try to run fsck on partitions listed in your fstab. Be aware that this could cause problems if you forget to put the disk in the drive when you boot, or have the wrong disk there.
8.7 What happens if there is no disk inserted when I boot ?
The kernel will try to read the partition table, but the operation will time out. There is nothing to worry about. Once you have inserted a disk, and try to do something with it the kernel will notice that there is a disk there now and rescan the partition table. HINT: when you change disks, it is a good idea always to use fdisk to check the partition structure on the new disk. The BIOS on some SCSI host adapters will attempt to read the partition table on your disk during the system boot. If you cannot disable this check, you may be forced always to boot with a disk in the drive.

8.8 Can I use the parallel drive as a real SCSI disk ?
The PPA3 paralleltoSCSI adapter is implemented as a single ASIC chip that Iomega calls a VPI0. It is embedded on the ZIP drive's controller card. There is an actual SCSI bus present, but not in a useful form. Although I haven't tried to compare the two cards, it seems logical that the VPI0 replaces the conventional electrical buffering circuits that would be required if the SCSI bus were extended outside the package.
8.9 Can PPA be used with Iomega's parallel port tape drives ?
No. Those drives are floppytape drives. There is no SCSI involved. Several people have indicated an interest in applying my methods to try to determine the protocol and develop a driver for these tapes. The first step in that process is to get the DOS driver working under DOSemu. I have not yet heard that anyone has been successful in doing it.
8.10 Will PPA work with the parallel port SyQuest EZ135 ?
No. The EZ135 is an IDE drive with a ShuttlePort parallel to IDE converter embedded in it. However there has been some work done on this driver. Check out http://www.torque.net/linuxpp.html
9. Getting more current information
More current versions of the parallel port zip drive (ppa.c) program and current technical information of the driver can be found at http://www.torque.net/~campbell/ Information of many parallel port external device drivers can be found at http://www.torque.net/linuxpp.html Parallel Port sharing or throughport information is found at http://www.cyberelk.demon.co.uk/parport.html Installing Linux from a zip drive (for machines without a CD) http://metalab.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/mini/InstallFromZIP.html An X frontend to the ziptool program can be found at http://www.scripps.edu/~jsmith/jazip/ 8.8 Can I use the parallel drive as a real SCSI disk ? 15
Zip Drive MiniHOWTO Information on configuration of Lilo can be found at http://metalab.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/mini/LILO.html Information on using bootprompts can be found at http://metalab.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/BootPromptHOWTO.html If you want to install the Linux OS onto a Zip Drive and run the OS from the Zip drive http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/mini/ZIPInstall.html Iomega's web pages are at http://www.iomega.com/. And if you are looking for general information about parallel port programming for the PC, you might want to visit http://www.lvr.com/parport.htm

 

Technical specifications

General
Device TypeZIP drive
Enclosure TypeExternal
InterfaceUSB
Width4.7 in
Depth6.5 in
Height1 in
Weight0.5 lbs
Storage Removable
TypeZIP
Capacity250 MB
Media TypeZIP - 3.5"
Average Seek / Access Time40 ms
Hard Drive
TypeNone.
Expansion / Connectivity
Interfaces1 x USB - 4 pin USB Type B
Miscellaneous
Cables Included1 x USB cable - external
Software / System Requirements
Software IncludedDrivers & Utilities
OS RequiredMicrosoft Windows 98, Microsoft Windows 95 OSR 2, Apple MacOS 8.5.1 or later, Microsoft Windows 2000 / NT4.0, Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition, Microsoft Windows XP
Min RAM Size8 MB
Min Hard Drive Space30 MB
Manufacturer Warranty
Service & Support1 year warranty
Service & Support DetailsLimited warranty - 1 year
Environmental Parameters
Min Operating Temperature50 °F
Max Operating Temperature89.6 °F
Humidity Range Operating20 - 80%
Universal Product Identifiers
BrandIomega
Part Number31310
GTIN00742709313103

 

Tags

DW6849 DV-410V-K Anti-spoof AJ3120 ESD-9000 SA-PM07 72850 Golf MK3 Iphone AVL 105 RP100A MAX668RVD Kosmos WS2357 E-TEN X500 KX-TG6431 TX-SA603 NP-HBC10 32PF7411 Zoom HD8 Printer TD6120 Nokia 1650 Shareport TGP 32KW Veriton M460 Euroset 825 WR250F-2004 Descent-freespace 2 FM49AH S07AHP Editor Nikon N70 X700HNA PSR350 NN-5558 AP1300 54021 421 XWS Travelite GX210 6 0 XC-NS1 Detector PV-L600D EAM3200S Doro 820 Style 29PT5507 58 Guerrero 4runner WNR3500 Party Ph70x-N DSP-R992 DB265MP S675 IP DRC212N 890R-41CD890a034-parts-list YV-150Z EL-6990 255 1 SGH-J600V Evolution UC33 HL-2030 DX-610 SUB-zero 590 HQC688 EBM-911 TA880GB Plus Cooper LCD1525M LBP-1120 Antispyware SRU5150 Oregon 450 Aspire 2010 Francisco Cd70 Urc-7720 VCL-ES06 ST-S3000ES Vapeur RL62vcts DVT-1946 Faxphone B160 Ricoh R10 37LG5500 SP-200E DI2011 DVH-P4100UB STR 5015 F-3611X WJ-MX1200A Iphone MRP-F356 Quadraverbgt MPF-10 1120C SLV-SE720E Mark II

 

manuel d'instructions, Guide de l'utilisateur | Manual de instrucciones, Instrucciones de uso | Bedienungsanleitung, Bedienungsanleitung | Manual de Instruções, guia do usuário | инструкция | návod na použitie, Užívateľská príručka, návod k použití | bruksanvisningen | instrukcja, podręcznik użytkownika | kullanım kılavuzu, Kullanım | kézikönyv, használati útmutató | manuale di istruzioni, istruzioni d'uso | handleiding, gebruikershandleiding

 

Sitemap

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101