Testing and benchmarking the micro-floppy "iomega clik!"

2024-07-17に共有
The 'iomega click!" was a micro 40mb floppy drive designed to compete against flash memory storage of the time. Did it success? Ha! No -- it was a project dead on arrival .. but it's still a cool example of 90s miniaturization tech!

-- Video Links

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-- Tools

Deoxit D5:
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O-Ring Pick Set: (I use these to lift chips off boards)
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Elenco Electronics LP-560 Logic Probe:
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Hakko FR301 Desoldering Iron:
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Rigol DS1054Z Four Channel Oscilloscope:
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Head Worn Magnifying Goggles / Dual Lens Flip-In Head Magnifier:
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TL866II Plus Chip Tester and EPROM programmer: (The MiniPro)
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TS100 Soldering Iron:
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EEVBlog 121GW Multimeter:
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DSLogic Basic Logic Analyzer:
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Magnetic Screw Holder:
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Universal ZIP sockets: (clones, used on my ZIF-64 test machine)
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RetroTink 2X Upconverter: (to hook up something like a C64 to HDMI)
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Plato (Clone) Side Cutters: (order five)
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Heat Sinks:
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Little squeezy bottles: (available elsewhere too)
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--- Instructional videos

My video on damage-free chip removal:
   • How to remove chips without damaging ...  

--- Music

Intro music and other tracks by:
Nathan Divino
@itsnathandivino

コメント (21)
  • A fun thing about their USB pocketzip drives: they're just the PCMCIA drives inside a holder. I don't think they even have any smarts, they just connect to some built in USB support on the PCMCIA card
  • ZIP might seem like a joke now, but as a graphic artist in the 90's they were DUH BOMB! Remember that's back when a blank CD-R disc costs $20.... each!
  • I think what killed Clik is the £100 CD-RW drive and 30 pence CD-Rs, at least for folks moving or backing up large amounts of data in the home. Memory cards for phones and cameras, then later for computers with USB sticks taking over from DVD-Rs. USB sticks had been around for years before they finally took off as flash memory prices dropped. Happened in tandem, but at a faster rate, with SSDs taking over from mechanical hard disks.
  • The late 90's were an insane time for tech growth. Iomega went from a huge entity in the industry to forgoten in the span of a few years.
  • @tim1724
    PCMCIA/PC Card: 16-bit ISA CardBus: 32-bit PCI (also has a 16-bit ISA bridge to support old cards) ExpressCard: PCIe/USB (ExpressCard 1.0 supplies PCIe1 x1 and USB2, ExpressCard 2.0 supplies PCIe2 x1 and USB 3, although I don't think anything ever really supported ExpressCard 2.0.)
  • @runderwo
    The Linux driver is called ide-floppy and Clik is still supported in recent kernels (based on work originally done out-of-tree for the 2.2 series).
  • @no0ne.
    The LPC soundcard adapter is called dISAppointment by Rasteri
  • @ncot_tech
    It's amazing how people can make complex moving parts so small when their company's existence depends on it. I wonder how many ex watchmakers were employed by Iomega in the 90s?
  • Man, I remember these things. Never owned a clik, but I owned a zip drive. Feel better, Adrian. Drink water!
  • I had an LS-120 drive around this time, like late 1998 or so. It worked pretty well and was obviously the same size as a normal floppy drive and floppy disk. But just like this thing, it was a bit too late. We had CDs already.
  • I like your explanation about ATA being a subset of the ISA bus, perfectly true ! To go one step further PCMCIA is an ISA bus on a different form factor. It is technically possible to connect an ISA card to an A600 or A1200 by adding a converter card. A picogus for Amiga maybe ?
  • @JL-hy7ve
    Adrian, I had covid a few weeks ago. I feel your pain. I did not feel normal for a least a week afterwards. Wish you the best for a speedy return to normal.
  • That name was so funny back then in the context of the clicking zip drives self destroying
  • I'd try setting "dma if available" and checking if actually dma is enabled in XP. It could get faster but CPU wouldn't be used as much. XP does it without a reboot. Win 2k needed a reboot for it. I can remember that as if it was yesterday. Recover quickly!
  • Linux driver for that kind of device is called pata_pcmcia and for some reason it is not loaded automatically. Calling "sudo modprobe pata_pcmcia" might help.
  • I remember when flash memory was so expensive that the 80 GB iPod had an HDD, while the flash memory Nanos were limited to ridiculously small sizes such as 2, and 4 GB. Insane how we have come from that to 1+ TB SSD internal sticks about the size of the iPod Nano itself...
  • Perhaps the Clik drive really can do 600 KB/s, but employs variable angular data density which would make it slower on the inner tracks. You ran the ATTO benchmark all the way up to 32 MB, meaning it would've given you the average speed, not the speed of the outermost tracks. At a 128 KB buffer size it reached 468 KB/s, so it's quite plausible that this would have been 600 KB/s if run on, say, the first 3 MB instead of 32 MB.