Mediavision Reno CD Rom Drive

Reviewed By Andrew Bolt

Specs
=====
Model:       Mediavision Reno Portable CD-ROM Drive
Price:       £174.99 including Squirrel
From:        Siren Software, Manchester, UK (0161 796 5279)
Amigas:      A600/1200 
Speed:       Double (306kB/s)
Access Time: 180ms
Power:       4xAA batteries for personal CD use, 12xAA batteries for    
             CD-ROM use or 13.5V mains adaptor
Audio Plugs: 3.5mm headphone jack, 3.5mm line out jack.
SCSI:        2x50 way SCSI2 Micro 'D' connectors. Built in termination  
             via DIP switch, external SCSI ID selector.
Multisession:Yes
MPEG:        No            
Buttons:     Play/pause, stop/off, track up, track down, open, button   
             lock switch, volume
LCD Display: Track no, time, busy, low battery, on, no disk, open. 
Dimensions:  Audio section:     14x14x2cm
             + docking station: 25x14x2cm
Accessories: Cheap 'n' nasty headphones, nice carry case, 3.5mm stereo   
             male -> male lead, SCSI cables and adaptors, mains power    
             supply.

The Mediavision Reno CD-ROM drive is unique in that it can be used a 
portable audio CD player, or as a double speed SCSI CD-ROM, via a small 
docking station.

I bought the drive after being seduced by its dual purpose design. If 
your getting a CD-ROM, why not pay and extra £10 for a portable one 
too. Hmm, why not?

Well, the Reno really isn't a particularly good portable audio CD 
player, when compared with something you could pick up down at Argos 
for £90. It's quite a bit bigger for a start, but it doesn't seem to 
like working at all from batteries. Admittedly my batteries are 
knackered old rechargeables, but they only last for about 40 minutes. 
Also the track access is painfully slow as the mechanism grinds and 
clunks away. I suspect this is why 8 extra batteries are needed for 
computer use, as these access times would be unbearable when accessing 
data strewn across a disc. So if your planning to use this thing on the
move, be prepared to shell out for some Duracells.

One good thing about the drive though is its reluctance to skip. I had 
to shake it very violently to get it to mess up. 

Connect the AC adaptor and the drive is transformed. Instant, and I 
mean instant, access to any track, and without as much painful 
grinding, although it does tend to make a plasticy ticking sound. 
Together with some Amiga software to make up for lack of fast forward 
and track programs, you can have quite a nice audio CD setup.

I didn't get a plug with the mains adapter though (I think this is 
illegal now in the UK for new electrical goods), and there is no 
information on what fuse to fit, so I just fitted the lowest I could 
find to avoid frying the drive.

Anyway, the main reason to buy the drive is, of course, to use Amiga 
CD-ROM disks, which it does very well. The claimed transfer rate of 
306kB/s is verified by Sysinfo, and the access time of 180ms is 
exceptional for a twin speed drive.

The build quality is good, but some may not like the mid-grey colour. 
The docking station is guided into place by 2 metal rods and is then 
locked securely onto the CD player. The top opening lid may not have as 
much sex appeal as a motorised drawer, but its fine for whipping CDs 
out while they're still spinning :). The magnetic clamp that makes the 
CD so shock resistant, does however make the drive stiff to open. Also 
a problem with the layout seems to be the lens, which is positioned at 
the front of the drive and could easily be touched by accident.

The carry case is very neat and well designed, although it'll take you 
a few weeks to work out what all the zips and velcro flaps are for. The 
supplied headphones, unfortunately, are crap. 

The documentation supplied is very sparse to say the least. 2 A4 
photocopied sheets. This is due to the drive being foreign (the text on 
the box is only in French, German and Italian) so the original manual 
has been nicked and replaced with the sheets, which will probably 
differ depending who you buy the drive from. Also stolen from the pack 
for some reason is the PC and Mac software, which could come in handy 
in the future, so I might try and get hold of this.

Power Computing has recently stopped selling the Reno drive due to its 
lack off support for the CDi Video CD format, which I don't see as much 
of a problem. If I want fuzzy jerky video I can just pop down to the 
rental shop and get it for a couple of quid.

The drive will still play MPEG/AVI from files on CD using the CPU 
although you really need an 040/060 to get decent speed.

A plea to PD authors: Please write a decent AVI/MPEG player that isn't 
a slow port, full of bugs and which requires 4 lines of cli commands to 
get working, and also a working utility to play CDs through the Amiga 
audio. 

If the Reno is your first SCSI device you will need to chose your 
interface. I opted for the Squirrel because its the cheapest. I was 
worried about speed but according to the instructions it's capable of 
3Mb/s on an 030 A1200, which is quick enough for any devices I'm ever 
likely to be able to afford. (incidently, I found that after fitting an 
030 my internal 3.5" IDE HD went from 1.39Mb/s to over 2Mb/s according 
to Sysinfo).

Fortunately the Squirrel comes with an excellent manual and set of 
software spanning 3 disks (2 of which are useful CD oriented PD utils) 
which makes up for the photocopied sheets.

Overall Ratings: (divided into an excessive number of categories) 

Portable use:   49% - Not too good
Hifi use:       75% - Pretty good
Computer use:   94% - Excellent
Documentation:  18% - Very tatty
Features:       90% - Yep, lots of features
Accessories:    79% - Good, but let down by headphones
Looks:          85% - Pretty smart, especially in its carry case
Speed:          78% - 10x floppy speed, 0.25x hard disk speed
Squirrel SCSI:  95% - Excellent piece of kit
Value:          90% - Only a few quid more than a normal CD-ROM
  
Overall:        Just scraped a 90%, due to the fact it does the         
                important computer side of things very well


Or, see what Amiga Format (issue 78) has to say:

Speed         - 4/5 - A standard double speed drive but sustained        
                      transfer rates are impressive.
Manual        - 3/5 - Adequate instructions are provided, so you should 
                      have no real problems
Accessibility - 4/5 - The hardest thing to work out is which way the     
                      carrying case fits. Supplied with software for    
                      Squirrel and CD tools
Features      - 5/5 - It's hard to see what more could be added to this  
                      mechanism
Value         - 5/5 - Outstanding value-added price makes it            
                      competitive with other "multimedia" solutions     
                      with the added advantage of portability.
Overall       - 94% - This brilliant CD-ROM system represents supreme   
                      value for money.