Iomega Portable Hard Drive (160GB)

By Craig Simms on 14/11/2007

More Iomega reviews , RRP: AU$169.00

The good:

  • Good USB 2.0 speeds
  • Bus powered, with DC backup

The bad:

  • No Mac software

The bottomline:

Iomega's portable hard drive is standard fare, but this is the exact reason it should appeal to most.

Editors' rating:

8/10

Iomega has been interesting to watch after its claim to fame, the Zip drive, was unceremoniously killed off years ago by the proliferation of USB flash drives. Its latest entry into the market is its aptly named Portable Hard Drive.

Design/Features
The Portable Hard Drive (marketing genius, that) follows an extremely minimal design -- a silver box with white ends. A single activity light defies convention and is positioned on top at the back of the drive, near the interfaces.

USB2.0 and Firewire are the connections of choice, and the drive can be powered over both interfaces, although the option for 5V DC is also there, should your ports not supply enough power.

EMC Retrospect Express is included for PC users, but as usual Mac users are left wanting on the software side.

Performance
The Iomega performed excellently, although was beaten by the LaCie Mobile Hard Drive over both USB2.0 and Firewire. It is however quite a bit cheaper than the LaCie, so those willing to sacrifice a tiny bit on the speed will find the Iomega well up to the task.

IoMega's Portable Hard Drive is available in 80GB, 120GB, 160GB and 200GB capacities.

Sustained Transfer Rate (MB/s)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
LaCie Mobile Hard Drive 160GB (Firewire)
35.7 
Western Digital Passport 250GB (USB2.0)
30.5 
Iomega Portable Hard Drive 160GB (Firewire)
27.2 
LaCie Mobile Hard Drive 160GB (USB2.0)
25.8 
Iomega Portable Hard Drive 160GB (USB2.0)
25.7 
Seagate FreeAgent Go 160GB (USB2.0)
22.5 

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