Problems arise when traveling and shooting digitally, especially with with multiple cameras. Adding a laptop to your travel accessories just to backup images is a big waste of space and weight. Memory cards can fill up incredibly fast, and nothing sucks more than not having free space to get that cool shot that’s happening right this second. Backup in the field is a primary concern of any digital image maker. One of the really useful digital gadgets that one can use to store images from SD, MMC, Compact Flash, and pretty much any digital card you can imagine is the Hyperdrive Space – not to be confused with the mythical hyperdrive engine which allows space travel at speeds greater than light. The Hyperdrive is a bare-bones storage device for backing up images from memory cards. The Hyperdrive is basically a notebook hard-drive enclosure with a battery, card slots, and LCD screen.
I bought my Hyperdrive just a week before flying to Tokyo for three months. The Hyperdrive with a 120 GB drive was the perfect solution for backing up images from my Ricoh GRD while traveling. I have a laptop and am continually trying to free up harddrive space. With the Hyperdrive I can backup 1 Gigabyte memory cards in a minute or so and not have the added worry of taking my laptop everywhere. When I need images, they’re right there on the Hyperdrive.
The LCD screen displays basic information. It allows access to which folders are on the drive, you can assign the name of new folders, check how much harddrive space is available. So, no, you can’t view stored images on the Hyperdrive Space. The Space is specifically for backing up images, not viewing them. I download everything from the card to the Hyperdrive, choosing an appropriate file name for the folder, which helps with Digital Asset Management (DAM). I now have a portable catalogue of all my images. Assessing the images is awesome and easy. For posting to my blog or other things, I just hook up the Hyperdrive to my laptop, open up Photoshop, and work on the photos I want to use. I save a copy to my laptop and post to the web. This allows me to back everything up on the drive, copy any originals that I need, and not fill up my laptop harddrive. When I get back to Zurich I’ll do a full backup on a normal drive, but for travel the Hyperdrive is a super efficient bare-none one of the best accessories for digital photography I have.
The Hyperdrive Space is powered by an internal user-replaceable Lithium Ion battery. For normal use, if you charge it once and then leave it hooked up to your computer for a while here and there, you won’t have to worry about the batter running out. A full charge is supposed to last for 100 Gb of data transfer and can be recharged via a normal outlet or by plugging the USB into a computer.
The only thing I would modify in the Hyperdrive design is the addition of doors to the card slots, which are open to the external environment. For normal day to day things this isn’t an issue. You get a nice neoprene cover with the Hyperdrive, which protects it during normal travel. Still, it would be cool to have doors to protect the card slots, or even better, the option of an external armor, like the kind available for iPods.
The Hyperdrive line has been extended since the first models and now includes the Hyperdrive ColorSpace, which was just released. The Hyperdrive Color sports a high resolution color screen with full playback of stored images. You can view histogram and exif info on the screen and even access RAW format images from various DSLRs. Exactly which DSLRs I’m not sure of, the info isn’t specifically posted on the Hyperdrive website. Since the firmware of the Hyperdrive is updatable, presumably the most popular RAW formats will be supported initially, and new camera models would be supported with new firmware updates.
Even if all my cameras aren’t supported, the addition of a color screen makes the Hyperdrive Colorspace pretty much the perfect backup device for digital photographers. The Colorspace version without a harddrive is about $200, if I have spare funds later I might pick this up, but really, but I have enough gadgets at the moment.
So, to sum it all up – a review of my impressions: The Hyperdrives are small, download photos really fast, read any memory card and the harddrive is easily replaced. You get the most value for your money of any of the other portable image drives out there. The Hyperdrive is an awesome example of the benefits of the digital age for the entrepreneur. Someone sees a need in the market and has the ability to fill that void at a cost less than the major companies like Canon or Epson or Jobo, who all have their own back up devices which are flashy and expensive.
I’ll use the Hyperdrive when I’m back in Zurich for backing up pictures and not worrying about knowing which photos are on which harddrive. I’m looking at picking up the Colorspace version, but it’s not an absolute necessity for me at this time. Now, if the color version had been out three months ago, I probably would have bought it.
Awesome topic to mull over Mark. I rock a Smart Disk “Photo Bank” which is essentially the same gizmo (though a bit dated at this point) but not as cool looking. I like having a big “file dumpster” to copy cards while travelling as well, though I wish my 40 Gig drive was about 5X larger. I have had trouble with this type of drive at elevation, and would not recommend relying on anything with a spinning internal drive disk (like my photo bank or any of the +4 gig ipods) where altitude is a concern. It seems that flash memory is far more reliable than the spinning variety. For this same reason, most of the larger ipods poop out at higher elevations as well. In fact, apple does not recommend using their laptops above 9000 ft. if my memory serves me.
Do you know what type of internal mechanism the Hyperdrive uses? Does it have moving parts or is it flash memory? I assume it moves, because that kind of flash memory would be super expensive!
My other complaint in regards to these types of devices is that it can be nearly impossible to find spare batteries for them. This makes it difficult to use them on extended trips (eg. in the mtns.) where recharging is not an option. Opening the sucker up with a jewelers screwdriver to pop in a fresh batt is a big pain in the butt, I wish they would design one that would run on a small store bought lithium which could be easily swapped out. For normal “front-country” use this issue shouldn’t be to much of a concern.
Matt
Matt,
That’s a good point about altitude and hard drives. The magnetic head which reads data off of the hard disk runs over a thin space of air, and at higher altitudes the air is less dense, hence, problems with the disk drive operation. The Hyperdrive uses a normal laptop hard drive, so it wouldn’t be ideal for use at higher altitudes, it’s basically just a 2.5" drive.
I think in the case of an extended mountaineering trip it makes sense to take a bunch of memory cards and back them up later at lower elevations. Plus, the solid state cards would have a weight advantage I would think. If you shoot 10 Gigs of data the weight penalty is much lower if you take along five 2 Gig cards instead of a heavy (by comparison) backup drive.
For battery replacement in the backcountry, I’m thinking it would probably be better to go with a small solar cell array than extra batteries. You can buy solar cells as a flexible sheet that can be taken into the mountains specifically for this purpose, recharging cell phones, cameras, etc. using the alpine sun. Check out the Brunton Solaris series, it’s a line of foldable solar cells that can be bought with differnt watts, put them on the top of your pack while in the mountains and they’ll charge many electrical devices.
http://www.brunton.com/
-mark
Hi – and thanks for this useful review. I am now the proud (if confused) owner of an 80GB Hyperdrive.
A simple question – can I store my AVCHD material on this aBaby. It accepted and downloaded some sample clips from my SDHC card, but I now cant access the material and/or transfer it to my Mac. Any thoughts?
Steve,
The Hyperdrive is supposed to be format independent, so in principle any file on a memory card should be able to be copied and downloaded to the device. I haven’t tried with AVCHD files so I can’t give a definite “yes, this should work.”
I assume the Hyperdrive is mounting correctly to your Mac, but after that what happens? Can you access the folder the files were backed up to? If so are those folders empty?
If you bought your drive recently the firmware should be up to date so that can probably be ruled out. Alternatively, you could try reading from the hard drive directly by removing it from the Hyperdrive and putting it into an external case – but that’s a pretty extreme solution.
You will see the files where they were copied, no need to take the drive out of the enclosure for that.
As for battery availability concerns, it’s a heavy-duty battery that will not requiry replacement for quite a long time. It’s charge should last for 100 gigs of transfer, and if u run out of juice, there’s an optional external AA battery pack, AFAIK.
Interesting revue but I’m presently confronted to the replacement problem of the battery with only 1 year of , I must admit, quite extensive use.
If you know a place where to purchase one I would be very grateful..
I Apologize, I’ve found everything I need at:http://www.hyperdrive.com/HyperDrive-Accessories-s/20.htm
I apologize, I found everything I neede on Hyperdrive Space site:
http://www.hyperdrive.com/HyperDrive-Accessories-s/20.htm
charles gausling I am looking for a set of instructions for the memory card backup device. I have one and cannot find the set of instructins for its use. Can you supply me with one? thank you.
Charles.gausling
@notes.udayton.edu
Check out their website,
http://www.hypershop.com/HyperDrive-SPACE-User-Ma…
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