Adding SSD to MBP?

I want to buy a new MBP (15", 2.2 GHz model) for University.
I wish to put an SSD in it, for performance and durability.  After some reading online, I found that Intel's SSDs generally have higher reliability (at least, in the tests I saw) than Toshiba's (which I believe Apple uses), so I wish to get a 320-Series Intel X25-M SSD, likely at 160 GB.
Before I make the purchases, though, I have a few questions:
1) How difficult is it to install an SSD at home, replacing the built-in HDD?  If it is difficult, could I get it installed at the Apple Store?
2) Is there a defined standard for laptop disk size/connections?  Is there some specific identifier I need to look for to ensure that the SSD I purchase will work with an MBP?
3) Would it be advisable to use only an SSD and no HDD?  (I've heard horror stories about SSDs crashing.  Obviously, I back up files, but it'd still be a massive pain to have to replace a drive and restore a backup.)
4) Does TRIM support make a significant difference in terms of performance? Should I wait for Lion to bring TRIM to Intel drives, or get a drive direct from Apple that already supports TRIM with Snow Leopard?
Thanks very much in advance!

There are a lot of messages in this forum on that matter of the SSD.
If you buy the MBP 2011 from Apple with the ssd option, you will have the MBP with a SSD (probably Samsung) WITH TRIM SUPPORT (in Mac OS10.6.7).
If you want to buy the cheapest version HDD in it and replace the HDD for a SSD afterwards, it is simple to do that, The best way is to buy with OWC: they deliver with tools and good instructions. Also the MBP Manual gives instructions to do that; also iFixit has good instructions. Good SSD with Trim support are Crucial, Vertex, Mercury, etc.
If you do not want to reinstal OS after installation, have an external holder (like Icy Box) to put your SSD in before installing it and clone the actual HDD to the SSD; then build it in.
If Trim support is not done automatically (check with System Profiler), you can do it easily with the program Trim Enabler (which hacks the IOAHCIFamily.kext file).
have fun,

Similar Messages

  • Pain-free way of adding SSD?

    Good day,
    I run SJS DS 5.2 patch 4 on a Solaris x86 system. When this directory was first set up using idsconfig, no service search descriptors were added for the passwd service and rightfully enough, searches logged in the access log only refer to ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com.
    I've read of re-running idsconfig to add SSD's but that looks woefully mis-scoped; I'd like something more specific to be able to force searches for the passwd service to search another ou in the same o container.
    I read about the serviceSearchDescriptor of the "default" profile and decided to set up the following on my test system:
    Attribute: serviceSearchDescriptor
    Value: passwd:ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com;ou=otherPeople,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com
    Not only was I unable to log in using accounts from the otherPeople container, I also then lost the ability to log in using accounts from the people container.
    I've scrapped this test system and am now rebuilding it but I'd like to know whether a pain-free way of adding SSDs exists. That excludes re-configuring using idsconfig.
    Cheers

    Ah well, no luck yet.
    I'm running telnet 127.0.0.1 on the test machine using a test account edepa2 created under the additional container morepeople.
    The DS access log on the test machine (pasted at the end of this post) shows that the morepeople container is beng searched and the entry edepa2 is being found but the telnet returns "login incorrect".
    The serviceSearchDescriptor attribute is now set to:
    passwd:ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com;ou=morepeople,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com
    Any ideas?
    Cheers,
    Etienne
    [29/Jun/2007:14:28:55 +0200] conn=60 op=-1 msgId=-1 - closed.
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=-1 msgId=-1 - fd=40 slot=40 LDAP connection from 193.188.36.249 to 193.188.36.249
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=0 msgId=1 - BIND dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" method=128 version=3
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=0 msgId=1 - RESULT err=0 tag=97 nentries=0 etime=0 dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=1 msgId=2 - SRCH base="ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=shadowAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="uid userPassword shadowFlag"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=1 msgId=2 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=0 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=2 msgId=3 - SRCH base="ou=morepeople,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=shadowAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="uid userPassword shadowFlag"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=2 msgId=3 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=1 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=3 msgId=4 - UNBIND
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:12 +0200] conn=61 op=3 msgId=-1 - closing - U1
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:13 +0200] conn=61 op=-1 msgId=-1 - closed.
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=26 op=12 msgId=13 - SRCH base="ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="cn uid uidNumber gidNumber gecos description homeDirectory loginShell"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=26 op=12 msgId=13 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=0 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=-1 msgId=-1 - fd=40 slot=40 LDAP connection from 193.188.36.249 to 193.188.36.249
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=0 msgId=1 - BIND dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" method=128 version=3
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=0 msgId=1 - RESULT err=0 tag=97 nentries=0 etime=0 dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=1 msgId=2 - SRCH base="ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="cn uid uidNumber gidNumber gecos description homeDirectory loginShell"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=1 msgId=2 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=0 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=2 msgId=3 - SRCH base="ou=morepeople,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="cn uid uidNumber gidNumber gecos description homeDirectory loginShell"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=2 msgId=3 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=1 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=-1 msgId=-1 - fd=44 slot=44 LDAP connection from 193.188.36.249 to 193.188.36.249
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=0 msgId=1 - BIND dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" method=128 version=3
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=0 msgId=1 - RESULT err=0 tag=97 nentries=0 etime=0 dn="cn=proxyagent,ou=profile,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=3 msgId=4 - UNBIND
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=3 msgId=-1 - closing - U1
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=62 op=-1 msgId=-1 - closed.
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=1 msgId=2 - SRCH base="ou=people,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=shadowAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="uid userPassword shadowFlag"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=1 msgId=2 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=0 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=2 msgId=3 - SRCH base="ou=morepeople,o=mydomain.com,dc=mydomain,dc=com" scope=2 filter="(&(objectClass=shadowAccount)(uid=edepa2))" attrs="uid userPassword shadowFlag"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=2 msgId=3 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=1 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=3 msgId=4 - UNBIND
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:15 +0200] conn=63 op=3 msgId=-1 - closing - U1
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:16 +0200] conn=63 op=-1 msgId=-1 - closed.
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:31 +0200] conn=64 op=-1 msgId=-1 - fd=40 slot=40 LDAP connection from 193.188.36.249 to 193.188.36.249
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:31 +0200] conn=64 op=0 msgId=1 - SRCH base="" scope=0 filter="(objectClass=*)" attrs="supportedControl supportedSASLMechanisms"
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:31 +0200] conn=64 op=0 msgId=1 - RESULT err=0 tag=101 nentries=1 etime=0
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:31 +0200] conn=64 op=1 msgId=2 - UNBIND
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:31 +0200] conn=64 op=1 msgId=-1 - closing - U1
    [29/Jun/2007:14:29:32 +0200] conn=64 op=-1 msgId=-1 - closed.

  • SSD in MBP 13

    Hi everyone,
    Apologies if someone has already asked this or if I'm posting in the wrong section!
    I have a mid 2010 MBP 13". The day I got it, I upgraded the HDD to a seagate 500 GB 7200 rpm. Today I only have 100 GB free. In need of more space, I decided that it was time for me to get rid of the optical drive and replace it with a HDD. In the process I would like to speed up my machine by adding a SSD. SSD in initial HDD location and current HDD in the optical drive location. I have a couple of questions:
    1- If I decide to go with a larger HDD, will those 12.5mm fit using a IBM (Ayagroup) caddy or will I have to move the SSD in the caddy. Any advantage/issue for doing it this way or the other way around?
    2- Will a 40GB SSD drive big enough for OSX, Microsoft Office, Parallels/ windows 7. I'll be moving my home folder on the mechanical drive.
    3- I know most people swears by Intel SSD, but are there any other SSD of the same value, performance and reliability? Any suggestion?
    4- Is there anything I should be aware of before starting the process?
    Sorry for the long post and thank you all for your help!

    Just based on research and reviews, this is one that I might end up trying if I go the SSD route: OWC Mercury Extreme Pro RE SSD 200GB SATA 3.0Gb/s Solid State Drive (http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/SSDMXRE200/) - at $649.99, it is not inexpensive, but also in relative line with other SSDs, considering what you pay for.
    They also have 120GB and 240GB Mercury Extreme Pro SSDs. The apparent difference here is the "Over Provisioned Redundancy" aspect, with the Pro class claiming 7% Over Provisioned Redundancy and the RE class claiming 28% Over Provisioned Redundancy. The way I read this is attributed to their RAISE™ technology - Redundant Array of Independent Silicon Elements that protects the data on your drive similar to having a RAID setup. In the their specs then you see 8GB allocated to real-time data redundancy & error correction for the 120GB Mercury Extreme Pro and 56GB allocated to enterprise-class real-time data redundancy & error correction for the 200GB Mercury Extreme Pro RE. You will also notice the RE class does cost me than the Pro class, so I am guessing it is for the difference in the "Over Provisioned Redundancy". But the REs have a 5 Year OWC Warranty, while the Pros have a 3 Year OWC Warranty.
    On another note, OWC has their little benchmark test down there at the bottom, which compare with Intel. Showing in "summary bar chart", OWC is better, but benchmarks can also be quite complicated, so although it is nice to see, I also realize this is just good marketing.
    On final note, as it seems that many SSD manufactures are integrating things such as the RAISE™ technology on OWC and the SSD Toolbox with Intel SSD Optimizer on Intel, which make them even more difficult to compare "apples to apples". In that case, I do value the OWC "No Risk, No Hassle 30-Day Money Back Guarantee" (read terms and conditions, which do sate a Restocking Fee: Yes, 15%*), which I have not seen this with other SSDs.
    Message was edited by: aprouser

  • SSD in MBP 13" Retina Late 2013 doesn't work - Can't boot at all

    I have a new MacBook Pro 13" Retina which works flawlessly. It has a factory installed 512 GB SSD, which also works flawlessly. Then I bought basically the same type of 512 GB SSD, 2nd hand but new, which I intended to install in another MacBook Pro Retina Late 2013.
    The seller told me it is compatible with the MBP Retina Late 2013, but when installed, the known to be good MBPR doesn't boot. Not from that SSD, not from an attached USD HDD which has two perfectly bootable Mavericks partitions. When pressing the alt-Key on booting, I can however see two partitions on that SSD (Mac OS X 10.8.4 and a Recovery Partition), yet it is not booting at all, thus also doesn't allow me to inspect or treat this SSD with Disk Utility or other tools.
    All I get is the grey screen with the striked through circle sign (see attached image). I've tried both, PRAM reset and SMC reset, no change.
    Here comes the interesting part: Although both SSD look identical, they have slightly different model and part numbers (see attached image).
    Working, factory installed SSD: Model MZ-JPUS512T/0A6. Part No. 665-1805D
    Non-booting, 2nd hand SSD: Model MZ-JPUS512T/0A2. Part No. 665-1805A
    Any ideas what’s going on here and how to solve this?

    Excellent point! Mac OS X 10.9.1 doesn’t equal Mac OS X 10.9.1!
    Back in the bad old days of Mac OS X Install DVDs, I was aware of the fact that there were different versions of the OS X Installer testing against the Mac ID to make sure that bundled versions get only installed on those Macs which the DVD came with. And the DVD where clearly labeled in that sense.
    Now in the days of Internet download and installation from USB sticks, SSD and HDD, one completely forgets about this. On the other hand, with Mavericks being free, I don’t understand the need for such limitations, and not at least the recovery partition allows booting any Mac which supports Mavericks.
    When you boot with the alt-Key pressed and you see at least one partition with Mac OS X 10.9.1, one just doesn’t understand why the heck the Mac doesn’t boot. Now I do. Apple would be well advised to simply add a short info line, like „This version of Mac OS X is missing components to boot this Mac. Please re-install from the AppStore using this computer“. It would take out A LOT of guesswork.
    Anyhow… I booted the MBPR using the working SSD, installed Mavericks from the AppStore on the external USB HDD, switched the SSDs, booted from the external USD HDD’s now bootable 10.9.1 Recovery Partition, wiped the suspicious non-booting SSD and installed Mavericks. No further problems. (Completely forgot about the CMD-OPT-R Internet Recover Mode keg55 has mentioned…)
    Thanks for the hint!

  • Adding ssd to an iMac early 2008

    I have an iMac early 2008 with a hd by sata. I have also SuperDrive by pata/IDE. If I change the hd by a ssd by sata and a 1 tb hd by pata, I will increase the speed of my iMac? Another option is to install osx on a ext. FireWire 800 ssd with a box, which is the best option?

    Adding the SSD for a boot/application volume will dramatically increase the speed of booting and application launching. Retrieving data from the pata hard drive will be slower than the existing SATA interface that your hard drive is on now. I don't know if that's enough of a speed hot to actually notice. The SSD will make the computer feel MUCH faster, I put one in my MacBook and it feels like a completely different machine, it's the single best upgrade I've ever done.
    I don't know how much an SSD in an external FireWire enclosure will speed thins up but I'm considering the same thing as I don't want to open my iMac and risk messing something up.

  • Third Party RAM and SSD for MBP's???

    I found MACSALES.COM GREAT SITE!!
    Crucial SSD's !
    Is it really that difficult to install the SSD and or RAM as I am hearing on the new Aluminum Chassis???? Any sites explaining how to DIY?
    BTW is the DDR3 OWC RAM Other World Computing - 1333DDR3S08S Item Not Found on par with the Crucial IBM quality??
    APPLE SITE: "4GB (two 2GB SO-DIMMs) of 1333MHz DDR3 SDRAM; supports up to 8GB"
    Does this mean there is two slots for RAM? It is not possible to buy 2 8GB DDR3 RAM for the 17 MBP? Only a max of 8G's?

    Is it really that difficult to install the SSD and or RAM as I am hearing on the new Aluminum Chassis???? Any sites explaining how to DIY?
    Look under *Tech Support* on the www.macsales.com site for instructions on how to install a SSD or HD and also for RAM. It's a 10 minute process for both. Look for the late 2009 or 2010 MBP models, the process is identical.
    BTW is the DDR3 OWC RAM Other World Computing - 1333DDR3S08S Item Not Found on par with the Crucial IBM quality??
    Question doesn't make sense please re-phrase it.
    Does this mean there is two slots for RAM? It is not possible to buy 2 8GB DDR3 RAM for the 17 MBP? Only a max of 8G's?
    Yes this is clearly stated in the system specifications.
    Roger

  • What is better to buy: MBP w 256GB SSD or MBP w Retina display 256 Flash D

    I'm in the process of buying an new MBP (13 inch) and can't decide between the MBPro with 256 GB SSD or the Retina display with 256 flash memory.  Both come very close in price, but I'm confused about which is better.  I use my computer for internet surfing, word processing for work, and watching movies, in addition I have large music and picture libraries.  I'm also confused by the option of buying the MB Pro with the standard ATA drive which would give me 750 GB.  Isn't there more storage in this last mentioned version?  Too many choices!!

    Given your use indications, I would opt for the non-retina macbook Pro with the 256gig SSD
    The standard SATA conventional HD of course is larger, but external storage is VERY cheap. A 1TB external USB toshiba is only $65 retail.
    The SSD is nice, I have both conventional and SSD.  SSD is very fast, boots extremely fast and is lovely on read/write speeds.
    If youre not doing video or high end photo editing in mass, the Retina screen is nice. Ive owned a retina for several months. I still have a non-retina Pro.
    750gig is MORE yes, but storage is CHEAP.    The SSD has a price premium. Basically its non-volatile memory (the SSD), meaning extremely fast and fast read/write.
    yes, the SSD is much smaller, but youre getting the premium ultrafast boot times
    Go for the SSD and spend $65 on a 1TB external USB.
    You MUST (the general rule is) have a backup for your data regardless anyway.
    Most importantly regardless of what you get, always always always backup your data (time machine backup) AND archive your valuable data (yet another external HD).
    Mass internal HD storage has almost become an irrelevancy (as it should!).   Any laptop should never (and never should have in the past) be considered a data storage center,....rather a working platform. Keep all huge files not often used OFF the computer on external storage.

  • Anyone got a crucial SSD working MBP 17?

    Had a Crucial M4 512 working my 2.0ghz MBP15 but the logic board went out. Got a refurb 17 MBP for dirt cheap...and it's slightly newer then the 15 I had...but when I put the Crucial M4 SSD in it...it will not recognize it. If I put the drive in anything else it boots right up, so we know it's good.
    Seems odd that a slightly newer (in design) MBP 17 would struggle where a MBP 15 doesn't.

    Thanks Bob. I have to run to the Apple store tomorrow to have them test out the logic board on my MBP15 that this MBP17 replaced...I'll ask them about their knowledge of bad SATA cables and issue SSD based on your comment. Thank you.

  • Logic 9, SSDs, new MBPs and OSX TRIM support

    Gang, my 2006 17" MBP is on its last leg, so the rumored MBP refresh is timely for me. The rumored hardware refresh has the MBPs sporting the new intel sandy bridge architecture along with a 16GB SSD boot for OSX. There's also a rumor of the option of upgrading the Superdrive to a secondary SSD.
    This would've been a 50/50 coin toss a year ago as I wasn't doing audio editing/songwriting. Now, researching this whole SSD write fatigue issue is driving me nuts.
    Some say that write fatigue is very real. Some say the effect is negligible in newer drives and it's getting better every few months with new hardware. Some say the write fatigue issue is moot since the poerformance is still (mostly) better than that of a HDD. Others point to it not being an issue with Win 7 and Linux due to TRIM, but it is still a bugaboo on OS X due to lack of TRIM support.
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    This really wouldn't be an issue if I was running an 8 core Mac tower with 10/15k rpm drives. Since I'm updating my laptop to another laptop as my only production platform, I really want to have the best portable package I can have performance-wise (setting aside the issue of ditching the ODD for a moment).
    If the rumors are true, I could boot from the dedicated SSD, have my apps, VSTs and samples on the secondary SSD, and do all my writes/reads to the HDD. Is this a logical file layout?
    For those that use a SSD, what has your experience been with it in audio production? Are you SSD-only, or in a mixed SSD/HDD environment?
    This is all academic really, because the first thing I'm targeting in a new MBP is 8GB of ram. My current setup is only 3GB with Logic and a major VST like Omnisphere or Trilian. I can squeak by with freezing tracks, etc. If getting opting for the SSD means losing ram, then I'm definitely passing on the upgrade.
    Thanks for any input!

    Mixed SSD/HD here.
    I didn't really see much value in having Logic (and other apps) boot any faster since I don't mind a) boot times as they are, and b) I actually appreciate some of those times when I can't get straight to it. Sometimes slow is good, it allows the imagination free reign.
    I use the SSD for all samples, etc. EG - I use Omnisphere a lot and working off a hard drive is fairly mind numbing when clicking through sounds. It's now fast enough that it begins to feel like an old school synth in terms of patch changing. I'm happy.
    This way is also 'write once, read many' so I get the best of SSD tech meantime.
    Irritatingly expensive for storage, of course.

  • Ssd in MBP late 2011

    Just purchased from Ebay a brand new sealed Samsung 840 series 250 Gb SSD i'm ok with the removal of HDD and re fitting of the SSD my question is what is the best method to reinstall Mountain Lion, a detailed blow by blow explaination would be greatly appreciated.

    1. Clone your current HD ( let's call it HD1) to the new HD.
    To do this, you will need a). an enclosure where you will install HD2, and b). the software to do the cloning.
    a. the enclosure, is something like this - not an endorsement, the link is to give an idea of what is needed:
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    b. the software is something like this: http://www.bombich.com/
    2. Put HD2 in the enclosure, connect it to your Mac, and clone HD1 to HD2 using cloning software like that identified above.
    3. Physically remove HD1 from your MBP and replace it with HD2.
    Instructions for this are here: http://eshop.macsales.com/installvideos/

  • Adding SSD to G400S

    I bought G400S with windows 8
    can i added the SSD storage in this laptop?
    if could, how should i done this without replacing the HDD?
    i read about the PCIE slot for G400S, so i've been thinking about the mSATA PCIE SSD storage..would it fit?
    thank you

    I dont think the G400s will have enough room for a Mini PCIE SSD but yea you can replace the HDD with an Msata SSD
    Lets make 2015 the year of the #DO
    Did I or someone help you today? Press the star on the left to thank them with a Kudo!

  • Procedure for adding ssd to i7 mini

    I am adding a 256gb SSD to a new i7 2.6Ghz Mini. I have the drive, tools and ribbon connector plus the video instructions.
    I plan on keeping the Apple 1tb drive in place, so the current OS will be there. I will also expand the RAM to 16gb.
    What I am unsure about is the recommended procedure to move the OS entirely to the SSD and set it up as the boot drive. Any help would be appreciated.

    Other World Computing links to this information in the fine print on their 2012 Mini Data Doubler Kit video page.
    Looks like it applies directly to my circumstances ... I guess the real question is what makes more sense, to run the SSD as a fast boot drive and the 1TB as on board storage or try to create a Fusion Drive with a bigger SSD than Apple provides. Fusion benchmarks looked pretty good, so will give that some consideration. Thanks All.
    The “Fusion Drive” option for the 2012 Mac minis can cause some severe data loss if you’re not careful. It’s a bit of a “perfect storm,” but it’s worth noting if you’re adding an SSD as a second drive in your Mac mini.
    This particular instance affects you only if:
    You are upgrading a 2012 Mac mini.
    That 2012 Mac mini shipped with Mac OS X 10.8.2
    You are adding an SSD to this Mac mini as a second drive, alongside the existing Hard Drive using anOWC Data Doubler Kit.
    If your installation involves all three factors, then you need to pay attention, as your installation will be affected. If one or more of these factors are not involved, then you don’t have to worry, you can proceed as normal.If you are one of the affected Mac mini owners, then installing an SSD is a little different. The preferred method is the “Internet Restore” method. Perform the following steps in order to format your SSD and transfer your OS and data from your original drive.
    Make sure your data is backed up, just to be safe.
    Install your SSD in your Mac mini, following the instructions.
    Restart your computer and boot to the internal hard drive like normal.
    You will likely get a dialog box stating that a drive is “unreadable.” Click the “Initialize” button to open Disk Utility. If you don’t get this warning, you can find Disk Utility at Applications/Utilities/Disk Utility.app
    Select the SSD from the list on the left side of the Disk Utility window and Click on the Partition tab.
    Select “1 partition” for the Volume Scheme, set the format to “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” and give the drive a name. You can then click the “Apply” button to format the drive.
    Once the drive is formatted and shows in the Finder, you can then shut down.
    Make sure you’re connected to a network. While it’s preferable that you connect via Ethernet, you canconnect via AirPort; it will just be slower.
    Restart to the OS X Recovery Partition by holding down Command-R until you get the Recovery Partition’s main window. It is very important to note that you should not use the version of Disk Utility in the Recovery Partition; it will see the two separate drives as a “damaged” Fusion drive and try to repair it; allowing it to do so will destroy your data.
    Select the option to “Reinstall OS X” choosing the SSD to install the OS on. If you’re connecting via AirPort, you may be prompted to connect to your wireless network.
    Follow the prompts to install.The actual downloading and installation process may take a while.
    After the OS is installed, follow the prompts to set up your computer. When asked, choose the option to import your data from another drive and select your original drive as the source.
    Once the migration is complete, your computer should boot to your SSD.
    You can use the Disk Utility like you did before and format your original hard drive as desired.
    You will now be able to use your Mac mini normally.
    While the above method is the preferred way to do this, if you do not have an Internet connection, you won’t be able to reinstall your OS this way. In this instance, you will need to use the “External” method.
    Install your SSD in an external enclosure (USB or FireWire) and connect it to your Mac mini.
    Boot to your Hard Drive.
    You will likely get a dialog box stating that a drive is “unreadable.” Click the “Initialize” button to open Disk Utility. If you don’t get this warning, you can find Disk Utility at Applications/Utilities/Disk Utility.app
    Select the SSD from the list on the left side of the Disk Utility window and Click on the Partition tab.
    Select “1 partition” for the Volume Scheme, set the format to “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” and give the drive a name. You can then click the “Apply” button to format the drive.
    Once the drive is formatted and shows in the Finder, you can then shut down.
    Restart to the OS X Recovery Partition by holding down Command-R until you get the Recovery Partition’s main window.
    Enter Disk Utility – since the SSD is in an external enclosure, you don’t need to worry about Disk Utility trying to create a Fusion drive.
    Click on the SSD in the list on the left and select the Restore tab. Drag the original drive’s icon from the left onto the “Source” field. Do the same with the SSD into the “Destination” field.
    Click the Restore button to copy all your data over to the SSD, then shut down.
    Restart holding down the Option key. Select the SSD/External drive as your boot drive and continue.
    Use the Disk Utility in Applications/Utilites to format your hard drive as desired.
    Shutdown, remove your SSD from the external enclosure, and install it in your mini.
    Once the SSD is installed, you should restart the mini and login. Go to to the Startup Disk preference pane and select your SSD as your boot drive.
    You can now use your Mac mini normally.
    No matter which method you use, once you have both an SSD and a platter-based drive installed in your Mac mini, you should not use the Disk Utility in your Recovery Partition on those drives; it will see those drives as a “broken” Fusion array and try to repair it, destroying your data in the process.

  • First time set-up and HDD to SSD advice (MBP 13")

    Hello.So, earlier this week I ordered the MBP 13 non-retina (Model #:A1278). It arrived yesterday. I haven't turned it on yet, and I know all about changing completely the first time for battery conditioning. I'm planning on using it for school this fall. Do you as a community have any favorite software for academic use (free or not)? Are there any programs, utilities, etc. that would benefit my mac that you recommend downloading. Second topic: I want to put in an SSD instead of the stock 500GB 5400rpm one. I bought this[1] earlier this year and never used it in my PC as planned. So, I'll clone the HHD to the SSD immediately after first time set up, right? I'd like to put the stock HDD back in with a caddy. There's a bunch of talk describing MBP's with year and time of year (late-2009, mid-2012, etc.). I have not seen mid-2013 once. Would this one[2] work in the most recent MDP 13 non-retina; the reviews don't specify. Thanks! Please leave any others things worth sharing.

    Office 2011 is an essential for the university. A backup drive and backup software. Develop a backup strategy and stick to it.
    Basic Backup
    For some people Time Machine will be more than adequate. Time Machine is part of OS X. There are two components:
    1. A Time Machine preferences panel as part of System Preferences;
    2. A Time Machine application located in the Applications folder. It is
         used to manage backups and to restore backups. Time Machine
         requires a backup drive that is at least twice the capacity of the
         drive being backed up.
    Alternatively, get an external drive at least equal in size to the internal hard drive and make (and maintain) a bootable clone/backup. You can make a bootable clone using the Restore option of Disk Utility. You can also make and maintain clones with good backup software. My personal recommendations are (order is not significant):
      1. Carbon Copy Cloner
      2. Data Backup
      3. Deja Vu
      4. SuperDuper!
      5. Synk Pro
      6. Tri-Backup
    Visit The XLab FAQs and read the FAQ on backup and restore.  Also read How to Back Up and Restore Your Files. For help with using Time Machine visit Pondini's Time Machine FAQ for help with all things Time Machine.
    Although you can buy a complete external drive system, you can also put one together if you are so inclined.  It's relatively easy and only requires a Phillips head screwdriver (typically.)  You can purchase hard drives separately.  This gives you an opportunity to shop for the best prices on a hard drive of your choice.  Reliable brands include Seagate, Hitachi, Western Digital, Toshiba, and Fujitsu.  You can find reviews and benchmarks on many drives at Storage Review.
    Enclosures for FireWire and USB are readily available.  You can find only FireWire enclosures, only USB enclosures, and enclosures that feature multiple ports.  I would stress getting enclosures that use the Oxford chipsets especially for Firewire drives (911, 921, 922, for example.)  You can find enclosures at places such as;
      1. Cool Drives
      2. OWC
      3. WiebeTech
      4. Firewire Direct
      5. California Drives
      6. NewEgg
    All you need do is remove a case cover, mount the hard drive in the enclosure and connect the cables, then re-attach the case cover.  Usually the only tool required is a small or medium Phillips screwdriver.
    While your computer is in warranty do not make any internal hardware changes. The minute you open the case your warranty and service support flies out the window. If you wish to use an SSD then put it in an external Thunderbolt caddy like the Seagate caddy.

  • SSD on MBP early 2011.

    Hello to everybody!
    I want to upgrade my MBP by installing of a SSD instead of optical drive.
    Please help me to choose the best of SSD that fits to my model.
    I've read a few test and made a short list of SDD. Here it is:
    Plextor PX-256M5P
    Corsair CSSD-N240GBGTX_BK
    OCZ VTX4-25SAT3_256G
    OCZ is the fastest one by tech spec, but I have read somewhere that OCZ SDD's doesn't fit to MBP as well as it kills of MBP's motherboard or something like that.
    Is that true?
    So please help to chose one of these 3 model or advise me an other model.
    Thanx a lot.
    Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

    Pesronally, I have and recommend the Crucial m4 series for Mac users. They just 'play well' with Macs and you can update the firmware on a Mac, unlike some other brands with which you need to use a Windows machine to update firmware.
    It's not the very fastest drive around - but quite a few of us around here have them and have had no problems with the drives.
    If the other models that you mention fit the MacBook Pro form factor, I'm sure that they would work. But I'd take a look at the Crucial m4 256GB SSD - the price/performance ratio is very good.
    Go to the Crucial site and look around. You can usually save a few dollars by shopping at Amazon, Newegg, etc.
    Good luck,
    Clinton

  • SSD in MBP early 2011 optical drive

    i have an i7 macbook pro that has been very tired lately from video editing and photoshop
    i have a 500 gb hdd that i want for random files (current hard drive)
    i want to run adobe premiere, photoshop and larger files from the ssd
    i will be putting the ssd in the optical drive of the MBP, leaving the hdd in its place
    how can i leave my old hard drive in and tell my computer to now boot from the new ssd ?
    also can i just drag and drop premiere/lightroom/photoshop from current drive into ssd once completed

    First off, I would NOT put the SSD in the optical bay - MacBook Pros MUCH prefer to have the boot disk in the hard drive bay - where it's supposed to be. A lot of people have had trouble with trying to boot from a storage device in the opti-bay. It may work for a while, but it usually gives you problems down the road.
    So just put the SSD in the standard hard drive bay, put your hard drive in the optical bay and install OS X and all of your apps on your SSD; leaving your HD for storage.
    When you install the SSD you can simply hold down the option key to boot from your 'old' drive in the opt-bay, format the SSD using Disk Utility and either clone your HD to your SSD or make a clean start of it and install ML on the SSD and then begin installing your apps on the SSD. If you're getting a 512GB SSD, you may just want to use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone your old drive to the SSD. If your SSD is going to be smaller, just install everything 'fresh'.
    No, you can't just drag and drop the Adobe applications. They have tons of auxiliary files and folders that are stored all over your drive.
    Oh, and after you have your SSD prepared as a boot disk, you can simply go to System Preferences>Startup Disk and select it as the boot disk.
    Call back with any questions...
    Clinton

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