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Corsair Flash Voyager 2 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive CMFUSB2.0-2GB

See it at Amazon.com for $18.99

Average Customer Rating
(4.0 out of 5)

Amazon Customer Reviews

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28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:

rugged, reliable, easy to use

(5 out of 5) by John Feider on Feb 28, 2006
This flash drive is great in terms of ease of use and durability. I've seen several flash drives out there that look like flimsy sticks, but corsair's design is freakin' sweet (meaning you shouldn't be able to accidentally break or crush it). It comes with a 10 year warranty, which shows they care about the quality of their product. The flash drive is supposedly water resistant, but I don't want to loose my data in order to verify that theory.

If you live on a university like me, you find the drive works well with any machine you can throw at it. Windows XP has no problem recognizing the device, but I've yet to try it on OSX. As far as software goes, it gets the job done if you do basic things like me. The software has the ability to partition the flash drive into two disks so you can have one partition encrypted and the other not encrypted. That way if you use a machine with out the corsair software no one can access your data and even if they try then it is password protected. The software is pretty limited to those modes of functionality and I can see users complaining about having something that manages their files/photos/whatever for them. However, if you want something that works and isn't skittish then check out this gem.

33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:

Excellent product overall - few shortcommings only

(5 out of 5) by Ilya Tsymbal on Mar 14, 2006 (Somerville, MA USA)
I got the 4GB version of this device from ZipZoomFly for abut a hundred bucks afer rebate. So I put it to the test. The transfer speed is advertised as 15MB/s write and 20 MB/s read. My test using a 624 meg file yielded closer to 8.5 write / 11 read - still a very respectable speed. This is on almost a brand new Dell Inspiron 9300, over USB2.0.

A few extras came with the drive, which I didn't expect and was pleasantly surprised to find:
1. a lanyard. I can't imagine wearing this around my neck like a dorky fashion accessory, but I know two people (single guys) who do. More power to them.
2. An extension USB cable - pretty nice if you have a desktop and don't want to have to reach to the back of it every time you want to plug it in.
3. A mini-CD with an encryption utility that lets you partition and password-protect a part of the drive, letting you keep private data protected in case you loose the drive (Now that would be a real bummer).
The design is pretty nice - a rubbery feel to the drive and the cap. There is a keychain/lanyard loop on the drive itself, not on the cap - I would have much preferred to have one on both, is that too much to ask? Why can't manufacturers provide that and let me make the choice - I can't figure out. Personally I prefer to have the cap attached to my keychain, so I don't have to have all my keys hanging off the computer.
One problem is that the cap is plain rubber, and it slides on the USB plug and is held there only by friction. It's nice and chewy, but it just doesn't feel that secure. Please, Corsair guys, if you read this, next time, make it a snap-on kind, that would be so much better.
I found a website with a TON of apps that you can run right off the drive - actually two - portableapps.com and portablefreeware.com - 6 pages of freeware apps! Also, Pegtop.com makes a nice free portable start menu type program, so you can keep all your freeware apps neatly organized.
Well, I'm now looking forward to years of happy use of this drive. It wasn't too long ago people were WOWed by the 4 gig hard drive in my laptop. Now, this is my portable desktop with all my apps installed on it and with me wherever I go. Any computer now is just a dumb terminal to me with network and print services.

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:

great memory, fast, solide

(5 out of 5) by Konrad K. Richter on Aug 25, 2005 (Germany)
I am owning the corsair flash voyager usb 2.0 drive (2GB) and I consider this to be one of the best buys I had recently. Data transfer is extremely fast. All computers that I have used recognize this drive at once. Storage is plenty for my daily data, so I don't need to carry my laptop. In addition, there is a password option included that gives me a feeling of safety in case I loose my flash drive (hopefully I never do). Konrad

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:

rugged, reliable, easy to use

(5 out of 5) by John Feider on Feb 28, 2006
This flash drive is great in terms of ease of use and durability. I've seen several flash drives out there that look like flimsy sticks, but corsair's design is freakin' sweet (meaning you shouldn't be able to accidentally break or crush it). It comes with a 10 year warranty, which shows they care about the quality of their product. The flash drive is supposedly water resistant, but I don't want to loose my data in order to verify that theory.

If you live on a university like me, you find the drive works well with any machine you can throw at it. Windows XP has no problem recognizing the device, but I've yet to try it on OSX. As far as software goes, it gets the job done if you do basic things like me. The software has the ability to partition the flash drive into two disks so you can have one partition encrypted and the other not encrypted. That way if you use a machine with out the corsair software no one can access your data and even if they try then it is password protected. The software is pretty limited to those modes of functionality and I can see users complaining about have something that manages their files/photos/whatever for them. However, if you want something that works and isn't skittish then check out this gem.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:

Avoid like the plague

(1 out of 5) by BuyerLSD on Jan 23, 2007 (edinburgh)
Three reasons why I will not touch any Corsair USB memory drive again:

1) As the other reviewer pointed out (4 gig) "The wide, thick rubber gasket surround the USB connector limits how far you can insert the connector into even lightly recessed USB receptacles". I thought it was just mine! There is not enough metal exposed so it means the drive frequently disconnects, loosing valuable data in the process and crashing the PC often.

2) Right from day one, the drive would show up as a USB Hub (I think it uses this to control 4 chips inside instead of a single chip). But this would at least 50% of the time cause any other device to be inserted into the same USB port on removing the memory drive not to be recognized - only a reboot would fix this. I tried this on many laptops/desktops and got the same results.

3) I contacted Corsair who said to ship it back to them even though the local retailer would take it back. Since I was out the country I told them I was uncomfortable posting it internationally (back to them in Fremont, CA) using ordinary post (courier would have been 50% of what I could buy it new for). But they pushed for this without offering to pay for the post so ordinary post it went. They now claim not to have received it and now unlike the other reviewer I do not even have own a $100 paper weight.

I'd like to say a lot of other things, but fear that Amazon will not print it, so lets leave it at the simple facts above. I don't think I have been so disgusted at a company of peripherals as much as Corsair. And for Corsair to validate what I have said is true, my RMA Number: R153005