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21.5 2010 mac hard drive upgrade
21.5 2010 mac hard drive upgrade









21.5 2010 mac hard drive upgrade

OWC assumes no responsibility for damage that may occur during the install. Please note, that before attempting to perform this installation, it is recommended you watch the associated instructional video in its entirety to determine your ability to perform this complex procedure. Just add your iMac's factory 2.5" hard drive or SSD and take your digital life with you wherever you roam! The included OWC Express 2.5" USB 3.0 enclosure offers maximum mobile data storage/backup potential with a sleek, totally bus powered design. Includes drivers, glass removal suction cups, and screen adhesive so you can get the job done yourself.

21.5 2010 MAC HARD DRIVE UPGRADE UPGRADE

This comprehensive kit has all the tools you need to replace your factory HDD with a high-performance SSD, bringing a complete DIY upgrade within your reach. Add an SSD to your hard drive equipped iMac to experience faster booting, near instant application launches and data transfer speeds up over 500 MB/s.ĭelivering the latest in flash NAND and controller technology, utilizing SLC and 3D NAND for long-lasting, power-efficient performance, the OWC Mercury 6G SSD line offers a powerful combination of performance and reliability for demanding everyday computer users. The complete solution for your 2012 and later 21.5" iMacĮxperience the extreme performance of an OWC SSD upgrade with this easy DIY SSD and hard drive replacement kit. With Mercury Electra 6G SSD and iMac HDD Kit ( SSD specifications click here)Įxpress Enclosure Specifications:( click here)

21.5 2010 mac hard drive upgrade

Kit with SSD and installation tools to service all Apple 21.5" iMac models released since 2012 Partition Map Type: GPT (GUID Partition Table)Ĭapacity:Ĕ99.76 GB (499,763,888,128 bytes)Īvailable:đ9.Product Description DIY Bundle 1TB OWC Mercury Electra 6G SSD and HDD Kit for 21.5" iMac (2012 - 2019) iMac On the upside, I hear changing the hard drive on this MacMini is *much* easier than in the past.Ĭapacity:ĕ00.11 GB (500,107,862,016 bytes) But this hard drive isn’t fast enough to saturate that, so having a link speed of 3Gbps wouldn’t have helped it. I won’t bother going in to much detail since I don’t think you’ll ever moderate your blog posts and see this, but I did the check you suggested and, indeed, the link is at 1.5Gbps with the 500GB drive. Now, the alternative would be to upgrade the drive myself, but it’s just a big bag of hurt! I’m too old to get any pleasure out of disasenbling hardware any more… There may be a difference between these two. What Ricky doesn’t say though, is if he has the 320 GB drive or the 500 GB drive. Apparently, 2010 Mac Minis will show you a Link Speed of 3 Gb/s (that’s what the Mac is capable of) but a Negotiated Link Speed of only 1.5 Gb/s (that’s what the HD is capable of)… On the screenshot above, you can see a Negatiated Link Speed of 3 Gb/s, which is good… except I made the capture on my Mac Pro. And that Ricky guy actually sounds like he knows damn well what he’s talking about!Īnyone got a Mac Mini 2010? Care to check the Negotiated Link Speed in your System Profiler? (About my mac > More info…) Now, according to this guy, the Mac Mini 2010 still comes with a stinky slow old SATA-1 drive, just as back in the days. I was looking into upgrading my 2006 Mac Mini (serving as a media server) with a 2010 model, just to get a bigger hard drive… and also a faster one!











21.5 2010 mac hard drive upgrade