![]() ![]() Cependant, le PC ne reconnaît pas du tout le conducteur zip. J’ai acheté un adaptateur parallèle à USB afin que le pilote puisse être connecté par PC, sous Windows 10. the plastic tabs holding them on are tiny. J’ai un ancien Iomega zip 100, et j’aimerais récupérer des fichier sauvegardés sur une disquette Zip. The only drawback seems to be that the bezels/faceplates break off all the time. They're pretty damn fast (also much faster reading/writing regular 1.44MB disks) and the electronic eject is just cool I still have a "new" Panasonic made LS120 drive double-pack bundle in the original box, complete with an ISA IDE controller (Promise FloppyMAX with its own BIOS) and four (still sealed) disks, as well as several used drives and a diskette box about half full with LS120 disks. Be aware of the format options and data recovery tips for Windows 7 users. Parallel Port Zip drives are NOT supported in Windows 7. Download the drivers for Iomega Zip drives with different interface types (scsi, parallel, usb, ide) for Windows 7. I received an automatic Windows 7 update on Wednesday and now my computer no longer detects my zip drive. IomegaWare software does NOT work with Windows 7, so features supplied by IomegaWare will not be available. My Iomega USB Zip250 drive was working fine on Tuesday (12/13). LS120 is definitely cool, but kinda useless for transferring "large" files to old laptops and such, unlike those Zip100 drives which were available (and most common?) as parallel port versions, which pretty much all of those old laptops have. 'Zip® 100MB, 250MB or 750MB USB, ATAPI, FireWire or SCSI drives should work with native Windows 7 drivers. If you are serious about using these old kinds of removables, I would recommend LS120 "SuperDisks", M-O Drives (e.g bernoulli disks), or Jaz disks…I've had one Zip drive die with the click of death just last week Not fun. Vous avez un lecteur de Disquette Iomega USB (X1DE-USB), et son installation sous windows est impossible car Windows Update et le constructeur Iomega ne fournissent plus de support de drivers pour ce matériel. ![]() ![]() I deleted them from all of my ZIP disks and never backed them up.Finkmacunix wrote:Careful, you never know when the "click of death" will strike… Thanks to the OP for posting the archive of the tools. You don't *need* to install any of the Iomega tools to access the drive in Windows 95 (guest.exe is not required) as long as your SCSI drivers are working correctly. I had some issues with remnants of the old Windows 3.11 ASPI drivers hanging around after the Windows 95 upgrade that were causing the system to lockup. You can keep both if you use a startup menu to boot directly into DOS or games or whatever and want to access the drive. Windows 95: you will want to disable any 16-bit ASPI drivers in DOS and install the appropriate 32-bit ASPI drivers into Windows 95. To access the ZIP/Jaz/etc drive from DOS or Windows, you have to use guest.exe to assign it a drive letter (which you can put in your autoexec.bat). If you don't have those, you can try various Adaptec drivers, as many cards will work with those. My memory of the intricacies of ASPI had long faded away.ĭOS/Windows 3.x: you will need for ASPI drivers that hopefully came with your SCSI card. In an effort to keep this thread properly necro'ed, I wanted to answer the above as I have just gone through the process of getting an old SCSI ZIP100 working on a W311 machine that I "upgraded" to Windows 95. ![]()
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