| Features Continued

The inside of the Kingwin
enclosure reveals a very simple design. the majority of it is the
circuitry to convert IDE to USB and the LED's. simple thumbscrews keep
the assembly together. Installation required the use of a Phillips
screwdriver and that's about it. For WinNT/200/XP users its simply a
matter of plug it in, initialize the drive in administrative tools and
you're good to go. I used an existing drive I had data on so formatting
wasn't necessary, I just had to reboot my computer after plugging in my
USB cable.

A closer look at the assembly.

The Deathstar is ready to go!

(click image for larger version)
Here you can see that Kingwin is the first to give us the
ability to stack one external drive upon another.

Here is the drive initializing after plugging in the
USB cable.
I truly think that this
enclosure is a must have for those of us that have extra drives just
laying around needing to be used. I have several ghost images on it, and
since my Soltek motherboard has the ability to boot a USB from DOS I'm
good to go. I can think of so many uses for having an external drive,
and seeing as how this drive is USB 1.1 compatible I can transfer files
from other systems as well. I can even carry it around with me to a
buddies house to share files too. The Kingwin is just a great product
and a must have for $35...
|
Club
Overclocker Rating |
|
Innovation: |
9.0
out of 10 |
|
Performance: |
9.0 out of 10 |
|
Quality: |
9.0 out of 10 |
|
Stability: |
N/A |
|
Overclocking: |
N/A |
|
Software Pack: |
N/A |
|
Value: |
10 out of 10 |
|
Overall Rating 9.0 |
|
|
|
|
Skill Level |
|
Project Skill Level
(10 being hardest) |
2
out of 10 |

|