The EZ 135 Drive is a 3.5" removable-platter hard disk drive. It was introduced by SyQuest Technology in 1995. It had a maximum capacity of 135 MB per disk.[1][2]
A successor drive, known as the SyQuest EZFlyer, was released in 1996. It was backwards compatible with the EZ 135 disks, and could utilize a higher capacity 230 MB disk.[3]
Specifications
edit- Capacity: 135 MB
- Average seek time: 13.5 ms
- Burst transfer rate: 4 MB/s
- Buffer size: 64K
- Mechanism rated for 200,000 hours
Interfaces
editThe EZ 135 drive was available with several interfaces. The external drive was available with parallel or SCSI interfaces; the internal drive was available with IDE or SCSI interfaces.
Pricing
editAt introduction, the EZ 135 Drive had the following prices (in US dollars):
- 135 MB cartridge: $20.00
- EZ 135 Drive – external SCSI: $240.00
- EZ 135 Drive – internal IDE: $200.00
Sales
editThe EZ 135 Drive was designed to be a competitor to the Iomega Zip drive and LS-120 SuperFloppy. The original box listed several advantages:
- Much faster
- Higher capacity
- 2-year warranty
Additionally the removable hard disk cartridges included a 5-year warranty.
Unfortunately, the EZ 135 drive was not backwards compatible with other SyQuest drives, and the original capacity was never increased beyond 135 MB. The Zip drive became popular and SyQuest's sales declined.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Peter H. Lewis (October 3, 1995). "New Ways to Store Backup Copies". The New York Times.
- ^ "3M Chases the Dream of Building a Better Disk". The New York Times. March 11, 1996.
- ^ "Letters". The New York Times. June 4, 1988.
the EZ Flyer is backward-compatible with the Syquest 135
External links
edit- SYQT homepage
- Zip drive vs. EZ 135, MIT, archived from the original (plain text) on 2007-03-11.
- SyQuest EZFlyer Information
- "EZFlyer Disk", Encyclopedia (definition), PC Mag.