For instance, WD makes several that are around $500, support four disks (enterprise grade red) and can be placed in a RAID10, giving you both redundancy and performance. Buy one from your favorite vendor that supports as many disks as desired. If you have the money or desire to have a SAN, chances are you wouldn't even be asking this question so I'll suggest the NAS. Additionally, you could essentially get the same performance by using two of the Thunderbolt 2 to Gigabit adapters (as you are likely using both onboard adapters already but maybe not and just WiFi if on macOS) and connect them to a NAS, SAN, vSAN or xSAN (the latter is VMware and the last is Apple) using a managed switch (these are usually $100-$1000 depending on amount of ports). This will allow you to use either external, multiple HDD/SDD in RAID 0/1/5/10 (haven't seen RAID6 but Promise may produce that). Two options, use the Thunderbolt 2 connector to an external enclosure made my several vendors. I know you probably already moved on, however I didn't see anyone providing you what I would do. I found out with some research, typically in the dev forums (and not Apple's) that this was intentional and part of a security fix tied to a very serious exploit (one that is as old as the hardware itself and essentially unstoppable, other than a total revamp of the EFI).
Macbook pro 2013 ssd drive mac#
I actually had this Grant guy comment on some of my threads but he didn't have a clue that the issue I was experiencing literally required me to hunt down another Mac Pro as Apple made changes to EFI and didn't bother sending their "partner" as listed any details (VMware does NOT certify any of their products work with anyone, it's the hardware vendor that does that - in this case Apple). I upgraded mine to max CPU and memory to run VMware vSphere 6.1u1 so that I could run many guest VM's all at once and totally independent of each other. Yeah, I think everyone pretty much summed it up. Note: I have deliberately not listed any USB3.1 models since the Mac Pro 2013 does not have USB3.1. However a similar enclosure for standard M2 SSD drives would be like this one : ELUTENG M.2 SSD to USB Adapter 2230 - 2280 NGFF to USB 3.0 Adapter SuperSpeed M2 SSD Enclosure for Samsung 8… Since then as mentioned OWC have launched their own compatible range of SSD drives obviously also using Apple's proprietary connector.Ī USB3.0 enclosure like this one would allow putting an Apple type SSD inside it - you could put your existing original SSD in it.
You might get away with reusing the heatsink from your current SSD drive. Note: Only the ones from a Mac Pro 2013 come with the heatsink the iMac and MacBook Pro ones do not include this heatsink. This is slower than the very latest MacBook Pro Retina 2017 but is what the MacBook Pro Retina 2015 achieved. Note: The type of SSD that fits inside the Mac Pro 2013 typically maxes out at around 1500MBps although earlier Mac Pro 2013 units shipped with slower ones.
from an iMac or a MacBook Pro 2013-2015, or buy one that someone had 'liberated' from the Chinese factory making stuff for Apple. Originally there were only two sources for replacing the original SSD, either buy a secondhand one some body had removed from another Mac e.g.
(Which will not fit.)Īs others mentioned, the original Apple one for the Mac Pro 2013 comes with a heatsink attached and this prevents it overheating under high usage. It does actually use the same technology as an M2 Samsung 951 AHCI SSD. The original Apple SSD drive is usually manufactured by Samsung for Apple but uses a unique Apple only connector. Check the reviews on Amazon and elsewhere (I believe OWC sells on Amazon). I don't have any first-hand experience with them but I would do your homework before jumping into something like that. That is likely because the main purpose of those upgrades is to increase the available capacities while attempting to keep performance in the same ballpark. Some of the other Macs from 2013-2015 use a similar looking drive.įrom what I see, OWC's drive is a completely different form factor that uses the same kind of connector as the OEM drive. The Mac's drive is a custom PCIe drive (both the form factor and the connector). The 950s are based on SATA technology and the 960s are based on NVMe, which is a new, standardized data protocol for SSDs.
Macbook pro 2013 ssd drive series#
Both of those series also use a different data protocol than Apple's drive. The Samsung 950 / 960 series you've seen are similar looking but they're actually a different type of SSD (with a slightly different type of connector) called M.2. It's easy to get these types of drives confused when looking at them. Posting some extra detail in case others find it useful I've seen this question a number of places online.