Castlewood Orb Drive


The Orb Drive is a 3.5-inch removable hard-disk drive introduced by Castlewood Systems in 1999. Its original capacity was 2.2 GB. A later version of the drive was introduced in 2001 with a capacity of 5.7 GB. Manufacturing of this product ceased in 2004.

2.2 GB drive specifications

This removable-disk drive was quiet in operation and incorporated several notable features:
Orb disks were made in Malaysia and Thailand and formatted for Macintosh or IBM compatible computers. Disks arrived in a transparent plastic protective case that was shrink-wrapped and enclosed in a cardboard slip case.
The Model ORB2SE00 drive was made in Thailand and the Model 777-052000S-KF power adapter was made in China. It was compatible with the then contemporary PC and Mac hardware and operating systems.
During the Orb drive's general period of relevance, two different SCSI/USB adapter configurations were provided by Castlewood:
  1. The first used two adapters, one to connect the drive's female HD50 "SCSI IN" socket to a female DB25 socket into which a male DB25 plug to USB cable attached;
  2. The second was Castlewood's own adapter "The ORB USB Smart Cable" Part Number 88205-001 made in Taiwan. This single unit had two manually operated locking pins to keep it firmly connected. The attached USB cable had a clear transparent cover incorporating eight toroidal ceramic surge suppressing magnets close to the adapter.

    5.7 GB drive specifications

The 5.7 GB drive can also read the 2.2 GB cartridges.

Interfaces

The Orb Drive was available in internal and external versions.
The internal version was available with IDE or SCSI interfaces.
The external version was available with parallel, SCSI, USB, or FireWire interfaces.

CastleWood Systems

The manufacturer of the Orb Drive was Castlewood Systems. It was formed by several former employees of SyQuest Technologies. Shortly after the Orb Drive was released, SyQuest brought a lawsuit against Castlewood.
Castlewood filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and ceased operation in 2004.