Integral - "9 in 1" USB 2.0 Memory card reader
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| Price: | £2.61 |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by flash_memory
14 new or used available from £0.67
Average customer review:Product Description
This "9 in 1" memory card reader allows you to transfer all your files (music, photos, videos, games and all types of data) between all your different memory cards and your computer.Simple and quick, it is the ideal accessory for your mobile telephone, PDA or digital camera.Compatibility: SD Card ? Mini SD Card ? Micro SD Card (Transflash) ? MMC ? MMC Plus ? MMC Plus ? RS-MMC ? DV-RS-MMC ?Memory Stick ? Memory Stick Pro ? Memory Stick Duo ? Memory Stick Duo Pro
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #207 in Consumer Electronics
- Brand: Integral
- Model: MCR
- Dimensions: .55 pounds
Features
- The Integral USB 2.0 Mobile Card Reader makes transferring files between different types of memory card and your PC - quick and easy.
- Move, save, copy and delete any types of file including data, movies, images, games and music. No Drivers required except for Windows 98SE
- Simply insert a card into the correct slot on the reader then plug the reader into the USB socket of a compatible PC. Your data is instantly available as an extra drive.
- A great partner for your mobile phone, digital camera or PDA.
- 2 Year Warranty
Customer Reviews
Total Recall
Needed a card reader to transfer images to an Sd card for viewing on my Wii.I took a gamble with this one as appossed to the more expensive Belkin product.The reason being that a reviewer stated they had problems with data transfer to larger memory cards, i.e.(1 or 2gigs).
I've experienced no such problems and no overheating worries either.
By the way,its 31p, or was, but the P&P alone is a fiver.
Easy, cheap and functional. But you get what you pay for.
Truthfully it is hard to justify such a high score, as this is an item that does what it says on the tin, and nothing more. But that's all it's supposed to do, and it does it well.
No drivers required, XP just takes a couple of seconds to work out how to handle the device once plugged in and away you go. I've tested it with 2 different SD cards (16MB and 512MB) and they work with no problems, as does the 512MB MicroSD (trans-flash) card that I use with it.
The build seems solid, but too light for my liking, it feels as though more care could have been put into the build, but the build quality doesn't rattle and everything is secure. The material's shortfalls are justified by the price.
There are two potential problems that I see with this device, both are easily avoided with the most minute amount of care. The first is there is no indication as to which way up the cards should be inserted. You should find that they only go in one way, so don't force them too hard. It is fairly easy to find out by experiment how they fit in, but don't break your card in the process.
The potential problem I found is while it is connected to my PC. Now this may just be a problem with my not-quite-so-perfect PC or my incredibly old USB extension splitter thing that I used to connect it (which takes and external power supply). But I found that the device got very hot when using my MicroSD card in it, and it hadn't been left in for that long. Granted I had trasferred lots to it in a short space of time, but it still worried me a bit, you don't want your memory cards melting in there. So just a word of advice: copy you files, disconnect the device immediately, and only reconnect when you want to transfer files back. Don't work on files straight off the device.
Pity to concentrate on the fallbacks of what is essentially a very functional, versatile, portable and cheap device.




