Corsair Flash Voyager

Corsair's Flash Voyager is the only drive in this roundup with a rubber case, and as such, it ends up being one of, if not the most durable drive of the bunch. The rubber casing does make the drive a little bulkier than its competitors because it is more round and thicker than more conventional drives.

The drive ships with a lanyard as well as a USB extension cable.

Corsair ships the drive with a mini CD that has both the instruction manual as well as Corsair's USB flash Disk Utility on it. The bundled utility lets you create a password-protected partition, as well as format both secure and public partitions and make the USB drive bootable.


Corsair's Flash Voyager features a Prolific dual channel flash controller.

In order to access the password-protected partition, you must first run the bundled utility and enter in your password. Only then will the password-protected partition be mounted and available for use. You can access both the secure and public partitions at the same time, as they appear as separate drive letters in Windows.

 Corsair Flash Voyager
Sizes Available 128MB - 2GB
Lanyard Included Yes
USB Extension Cable Included Yes
Data Encryption No
Password Protection Yes (Windows Only)
Secure + Public Partitions Simultaneously Accessible Yes
Flash Controller Prolific PL-2518
Flash Memory Toshiba TC58NVG0S3AFT (256MB Version)
Warranty 10 years

How We Tested Crucial Gizmo!
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  • LightRider - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    Page 22 Shikatronics Manhattan

    quote:

    The drive ships with a lanyard and a USB extension cable, which makes the cap issue less of a hindrance
    USB Extension Cable Included No
    Data Encryption No
  • LightRider - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    Of course I make an error in my post pointing out an error...
    quote:

    Lanyard Included No
    USB Extension Cable Included No
  • phisrow - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    I'm glad to have some idea about real world performance specs, to the degree that the volatility of the market allows that, of these drives. Any chance that this, or future, reviews of this kind could test making the drives bootable. Some are easy, some are impossible, and some need some real voodoo to get them working. I'd love to know which is which these days.
  • johnsonx - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    Page 13:

    "although, neither is obviously full-proof."
  • yacoub - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    "From top to bottom, a AA battery, Kingston DataTraveler II drive, Kingston DataTraveler Elite."

    No, not even close.
    Elite is on top, DT2 is next, AA battery next, and 9-volt battery on the bottom.
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    C'mon, I soooo posted that before you!

    :p

    -TIM
  • yacoub - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    What's with all the scratches on the Corsair Flash Voyager's USB connector?
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    I was actually wondering that, too ... what did you do to that poor thing to take the cover off???

    All in the name of science, eh?

    TYPO: Pg 13 ... the caption for the "battery" picture doesn't correspond to the actual picture ... oh ... and just how OLD is that 9V Eveready? It looks like something out of the stonage in comparison to the other things in the picture ...

    -TIM
  • SpaceRanger - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    Stonage?? Sorry.. Couldn't help pointing out a typo in a "typo informative" post..

    /em hides now.
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - link

    :p

    And that's all I hafta say about that.

    -TIM

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