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Freecom CLS mobile drive review

by Paul Lester

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03 Sep 2010

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The Freecom CLS is both fast and convenient

Freecom's CLS drive is a convenient solution for those who frequently work with multiple or incremental backups, automating the process well and being both portable and rugged enough to carry around on the move. If these benefits justify the rather high price for you, it's well worth considering.

Pros:

Decent performance; tidy and ruggedised design; convenient

Cons:

Quite expensive; dock can be sluggish in accepting multiple drives

Overall Rating:

4 Star Rating: Recommended

Price: £69 (250GB)

Manufacturer: Freecom

Reliable backup solutions are essential in office environments, and Freecom's CLS is a little more versatile than your average portable hard drive. The unit is sold individually in capacities ranging from 250GB to 640GB, each sporting a USB 2.0 interface and being solidly designed with a rubberised protective cover.

Where the CLS differs is that it's designed as a multiple-drive backup solution. Each drive comes in its own plastic case with an index card and sports a replaceable slip of paper that can be used to label the current contents.

Freecom is selling the drive as a modern day replacement to tape. It touts it as being ideal for situations where incremental system and content backups need to be performed and maintained over time, and be retrieved quickly and easily when required.

To this end it also offers an optional three-port dock to quickly mount and open multiple drives for data access, avoiding the need to fiddle around with cables.

It's a simple but elegant solution that we can see coming in pretty useful in the right environment, providing that performance is up to scratch.

As mentioned, each drive can be connected directly to a USB port using the short cable supplied. We ran a few read and write tests over a direct connection and were pleased to note that the CLS is pretty quick.

1GB of data appeared on the drive in around 40 seconds (25MB/s) and a 5GB folder transferred a shade slower at 23MB/s. One of the faster drives we've seen recently is the USB 2.0 version of Iomega's eGo Portable, and Freecom has just pipped it for speed here.

We also got our hands on the three-port dock that Freecom offers as an accessory to the CLS drive. This is a powered USB dock tailored to fit the CLS drive, and has an extra USB interface for connecting additional devices.

Freecom-cls-5

It works very well and quickly represents any connected drives individually in Windows Explorer, although we did experience some issues when devices are mounted in quick succession. This can be solved by waiting for one to appear on your system before connecting another.

250GB to 640GB; USB 2.0; 109 x 79 x 13mm; 155g

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