Freecom Traveller Premium CD-RW
2. Installation
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Installation:
Because of the special role of the Freecom Traveller, we thought that it
wouldn't be proper to testing on a desktop PC. Therefore, we used a laptop to
do all the tests and finally compare the three connection possibilities (USB,
PCMCIA, Parallel Port). Of course, the drive was also tested on a variety of
desktop systems, but the results we are presenting you are based on the Laptop
Tests.
Test System:
Fujitsu-Siemens Scenic Mobile 750 AGP
PIII Mobile 450Mhz
64MB SDRAM
6.4MB Toshiba HDD
ATI Rage Pro AGP
Matsushita UDJA-140 Internal 24x IDE CD-ROM
Two PCMCIA Slots
Two USB Slots
Win98 SE
USB:
We started the installation procedure by first trying on the USB Cable.
After plugging both the USB Cable and the Freecom Cable in the drive, we plugged
the other end to the laptop itself. The Cable was recognized at once as Freecom
Cable and we were asked about the proper drivers. There are some issues here:
Freecom supplies the drive with a DriverChoice Program that lets you pick one
of the three available drivers for the interface. These are the High Speed driver,
the Compatibility Driver and the Win Standard driver (sorted by speed). The
difference between the first two is that the first one requires an IRQ, whereas
the second doesn't but it sacrifices some speed. The third driver is supposed
to be used only when compatibility problems are faced. The driver revision we
used was rev. 010 for Win98/2000.
PCMCIA:
The same issues also apply to the PCMCIA Cable, which shares the same driver
with the USB interface. As we had installed the drivers for the USB before,
the drive could be used at once.
Parallel Port:
A slightly different procedure is followed here. Before plugging the drive
in, we had to install the accompanying driver. It installed an initialization
program that runs on Windows' Startup as well as a Freecom Configuration Program
that lets you control the parallel port mode or leave it to auto detection.
The supported modes are: Unidirectional (SPP), Bi-directional (SPP), Standard
EPP and Fast EPP in both Read and Write Modes. You can also select manually
the parallel port address and the IRQ. For our tests, we used the Fast EPP Mode.
It must be noted here that the Parallel cable can be used in conjunction with
a Printer, which can be normally connected on the parallel port cable, which
acts as a pass-through. In our tests, we kept a BJC-5100 printer connected and
didn't notice any inconvenience.
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