USB Floppy Drive, Mougerk 3.5" USB External Floppy Diskette Drive 1.44 MB FDD Portable USB Drive Plug and Play for Laptops Desktops and Notebooks (Black)
Hard Drive | 1.44 MB Mechanical Hard Disk |
Brand | Mougerk |
Series | 8541581130 |
Item model number | 8541581130 |
Item Weight | 10.2 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 4.72 x 4.33 x 0.79 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 4.72 x 4.33 x 0.79 inches |
Color | Black |
Hard Drive Interface | USB 2.0/3.0 |
Manufacturer | Mougerk |
ASIN | B075JDNMMN |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | September 10, 2017 |
G**R
UPDATE: totally worthless!!!
So, this drive worked for a few disks, then it started acting like every disk put into it needed to be formatted. It is "plug and play" but it is totally unreliable! I'm throwing it away because it is total trash and too late for a refund.I suspected there was no way every disk I had was bad, so I got this other device instead and used it with an old floppy drive and I was able to read pretty much all the data on multiple disks. This is what finally worked via USB with Windows 10, provided you have an old floppy drive you know works: IYSHOUGONG 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy Drive Connector 34 PIN 34P to USB Cable Adapter PCB Board
S**K
Works Great With Windows XP, 7 and 8.1
This Floppy 3.5 USB 3.0 External Floppy Disk Drive (Plug and Play) was a Teac Model No. FD-05PUB before Mougerk took it over, using the same Model No., and updated it to conform with our modern day computers and Operating Systems (OS). The printing on the box states that the Floppy Disk Drive comes with a CD-ROM containing a driver (or drivers?) and a User’s Guide. Not true! The box contained only the Floppy Disk Drive. I have three PCs with Windows OS installed. They are as follows: one Desktop running Windows XP, one Desktop running Windows 7 and one Laptop running Windows 8.1. I am happy to say that, yes the Floppy Drive is ”Plug and Play”, yes it is USB 3.0 and yes this External Floppy Drive works great with all three of my computers and their installed OS. I liked it so well I bought another one. New? I don’t think so. Updated? I believe so. Watch out for the Internet because so many of these External Floppy Disk Drives need the CD-ROM containing the drivers. The driver update companies are cashing in on this problem.
W**L
Received a working 3.5 inch floppy drive
I received a working 3.5 inch floppy drive on the day promised for delivery (I live in a small city). Mougerk emailed me a set of instructions for use of this drive before the drive arrived. I used Windows 7 on both a desktop and and a laptop, and I was able to read all types of 3.5 inch floppies I had. The drive is also able to write and format disks. I cannot vouch for longevity of this drive yet.The drive does not function like the old built-in drives we remember. You cannot go from disk-to-disk viewing contents. Plug into USB and wait for software to load and make sure drive has stopped making noises. Then you can check through Windows Explorer to make sure the drive is recognized or insert floppy first. I have to remove the disk and close Explorer before working with the next floppy disk. (You just leave the drive plugged in until you are finished with it.) Any troubles might be a bad disk or no program that can read the disk, but can be other reasons.
K**R
Can't tell if it is working
This drive arrived quickly and in good shape. The first time I attempted to plug it into the USB port it shorted out some pins and forced a PC reset. This was probably my fault so no blame there. On my next attempt I did get it plugged in okay and the computer recognized drive_A. But when I tried to read a disc the green process bar started moving slowly and it took several minutes to get to the point where it asked me to insert a disc in drive A. There was already a disc in there so I removed it and put it in again. Nothing. I tried a few more times, and at one point it actually did show some files on the drive. I had been using a USB port in the front of the computer, but those might not deliver enough power, so I moved it to one in the back, which is directly wired into the PCB. The green light on the drive comes on either way but overall, it turned out to be a waste of money and time. I blame Windows 10 and not the drive. The new technology is just not backward compatible. So now I still have a stack of old 3.5" floppies and I can't tell what's on them, if anything. I don't want to just pitch them out and I am reluctant to destroy them, since they may have some interesting content.Update 1/10/2020: I took my drive and stack of 3.5" floppies to a neighbor. We plugged the drive into his laptop and it was able to read several of the discs. He had an old PC running Windows7 and we were able to read most of the discs. I copied the content onto a flash drive for future use. Seeing that the drive worked with his laptop I brought it back home and tried it again with a disc we were able to read on his computer. No luck. So there is something going on that keeps this drive from working with my desktop PC. At least I recovered everything I wanted off the old floppies, and I can now destroy them. For anyone considering buying this drive, you may or may not be able to use it with your Windows10 computer.
J**T
Worked fine on my Mac and PC.
I have used the drive without issues on both my old Mac Mini (High Sierra) and my newer HP Desktop PC (Windows 10).On both computers I hooked the drive up after booting to the desk top.The PC recognized and identified it as the A Drive immediately.Th Mac Mini did not initially see the drive. I had to go to the About This Mac under Finder. It showed up under the USB drive list after a refresh.I was able to look at all of the files on my 3.5 disks. Nice to have access to all my old film photos I had digitized back in the 90s and early 2000s
Trustpilot
1 week ago
3 weeks ago