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Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac

Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac
  1. Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Pro
  2. Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Mac
  3. Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Free

Rating: 5/5 challenging install in 2012 mac mini January 31, 2018 I purchased this drive and the data doubler kit to upgrade my 2012 mac mini. Am using this drive as an internal backup to the 1 TB SSD that I inserted. Put the old spinning HDD in an external case as a way to hold on to current configuration until I am sure the new setup works.

Simple thumb-pushing didn’t work for me, so I bought the tool. Insert the MMLBRtool. There’s an initial lip you might catch about halfway down, but wiggle beyond the lip to a definite bottoming out, and equal lengths of the tool on each side of the elbows as shown. As you lever the logic board per the illustrations, you’ll notice the black bezel begin to separate on one side or the other. Use a prying tool or guitar pick to help separate the bezel from the body on top and bottom, and the logic board will slide out easily with gentle prying. On my Mini, the bezel’s retaining clips (best seen in Step 25) were very snug to the body, preventing the thumb-push.

Using the pick released them from the body. I used 2 mini flathead screwdrivers with the same thickness as the holes with the heads aligned straight up and down. They will fit into little sockets attached to the case below the board.

The side with the power cord came out much easier than the side with the headphone jack, so I removed the tools after a small gap was created and pushed semi-hard on the logic board with a broken spudger (a screwdriver would have worked, too) right in the elbow curve shown to the left of the screw in step 14, and the whole thing slid right out. May be its me, but I had a right issue with this, I then noticed the screw I loosened in step 10 was bending over. I removed the screw completely, logic board came out, and the metal pillar on the underneath of the board where said screw went in was bent. When I put it all back together afterwards after changing the drive, that long screw was bend, on straightening everything up, the pillar snapped off the logic board. Everything tightened up and its booted up fine. It might just me not following the instructions properly though. My logic board was hung up on the left side with the plastic retainer or the two grounding tabs not giving up the ghost.

There is no good picture of this on this procedure. If you go the the heat sink replacement procedure you can see a pretty good bit of it below the presenter’s right thumb in the opening pic and in a larger pic at step 27. Not that the logic board assembly can move much while seated I was able to shift (ever so slightly) the black plastic backside to the right and the board finally unlatched and came out.

I was so worried that I was going to over force it and break something, you know, like the logic board. Not sure if I have a solution other than don’t force it.

If it seems hard and one side seems to have a screw or other some such locking device stop forcing it and try shifting the logic board to the side opposite were it is catching. If you can’t get the logic board assembly back in so that it is flush (as it was before you did your surgery on the machine) then I would pay attention to two things: 1) the “sock.” Make sure it is back in place in the right way. I wish I could tell you which way that is but because there is no picture I had to guess and I can’t remember what my guess was now. 2) the retaining clip in step 26.

I was unable to properly seat the logic board back into the machine so that it was flush UNTIL I fooled around with the clip and, I GUESS, put it in properly this time. After I did that I was able to properly push the logic board back into place. Add a comment. This guide is almost perfect aside from the omission of a picture of that well-hidden adhesive. I've seen it on other Apple SATA connectors, but it's been a few months and I didn't think about it today. Please someone upload a picture of the adhesive on the PCB side of the drive. I'll gladly do it myself when I next open a 2014 Mac Mini, but I've no idea when I'll get to open another one.

I also struggled mightily for about 15 minutes before finding the small black tape. Like a jerk, I forgot to take close up pictures while I had it apart:- I was probably 5 minutes away from breaking off the SATA connector by prying too hard using a spudger on each edge of the cable. If anyone has pictures, hopefully they can upload here to help out others. This mac mini was significantly different from previous minis I've worked on, the guide saved me A LOT of time.

Thanks for the great writeup! I just installed the Samsung EVO Pro 850 512gb SSD into my HDD slot as i purchased a HDD model of the mac mini only. This SSD works like a charm, my boot time before with the 5400rpm HDD was nearly 2 minutes, with this SSD it is now down to 9 seconds!

I highly recommend updating your mac mini if its an HDD only with an SSD as it will speed it up tremendously! The teardown wasn't bad at all, i had tore down in 15 minutes and had it put back together in 15 minutes. The only trouble i had was taking out the HDD, Ifixit sent me a TR9 instead of just a T9 and the TR9 is bigger, it wouldn't fit but i stripped away at the screws and finally made it work! I followed the instructions and replaced my HD with and SSD - well worth it. However, several glitches along the way: 1. The TR9 screwdriver I purchased from iFixit sucks. The handle turns but the shaft doesn't.

The screws holding the original HD to the tray were so tight, I had to go to Geek Squad to have them removed. It wasn't clear what the power supply clip held in place. I managed to get it back in, but I'm not sure it is holding anything. It was not clear if the tape holding the SATA cable connector to the original HD was needed for the new SSD (It wasn't). I ripped it while taking it off. The DC-In connector to the logic board would not come out using fingers - not much room to get fingers in. Had to pry it off using a flat head screwdriver.

Awesome guide. It looked daunting but I did it with my 9yo son and it was actually really easy. There were a couple of steps where you needed small fingers for sure. My old HDD (1TB 5400 RPM) tested with Black Magic showed Read/Write speeds of 30-30 MB/s. With a Crucial 1TB SSD hooked up via USB (in a cheap little enclosure) it was 41 MB/s. Same SSD installed inside the Mac Mini: 350-390 MB/s read and 420-480 MB/s write. And it absolutely flies compared to the stock drive.

I ended up ordering the parts from Amazon because iFixIt was out of the T9. Wish I could contribute some money to iFixit or Sam, because this was an incredibly valuable guide. (Let me know if/how I can!) Pro tip: I used one of those pill boxes with compartments for every day of the week, to store the screws from each step. That way I'd make sure to use the correct screws when reassembling.

Hello, I just follow this guide and on my Mac Mini there was no SSD to remove so it was easier but I have to tell people who are missing some tools that there are few ways to overcome it. For the whole tutorial I just used my iFixIt 54 Bit driver. It's really handy and I never stumbled upon a screw I couldn't screw while having it! To remove the back cover I used an old postcard (rigid paper/cardboard) and instead of pushing on one point I slided the paper around the side of the back cover! Also, to remove the connectors just use a flat screwdriver and be gentle, it usually works great. Finally, to remove the motherboard, I started by using iron wire but I bent kappa so instead I went with ye ol' thumb switcharoo which consist simple of pushing with both thumbs on the black ventilation thing. Just push gently and don't push sideways or it will destroy the ventilation.

Also, don't forget to remove the black sticker on the SATA connector! Nice procedure. I did screw up bad though and managed to rip off the fan connector from the mobo because I did not take the time to read the part about lifting the connector out of the socket. I thought it slid out, not up. I didn't have the mobo removal tool, so I fabricated one out of a metal coat hanger, and it worked perfectly. In the end, my mobo was dead anyway due to a corrupt EFI, so even though I damaged the fan connector, I didn't lose anything. I learned a good lesson and I will know what pitfalls to avoid next time.

Tools I used: ifixit 64-bit driver kit, spudger, tweezers, coat hanger and diagonal cutters (to cut the coat hanger). Just followed this procedure through and have to say it helped enormously. I hadn't got the motherboard extraction tool so made one out of a wire coat hanger bent to shape, the diameter of the wire was spot on. Worked a treat, however it does require quite a bit of force which is un-nerving, but once you have created a gap between the back panel (Black Bit) and the casing you can get your thumb and or finger nails in there and pull it out the rest of the way. 480GB Sandisk Ultra II installed and what a difference it makes to performance. Cloned the disc first using Carbon Copy to the SSD on an external USB SATA docking station, tested by booting from the USB SSD first to check all was OK, then performed the swap over. Thanks for the Teardown guys.

Nearly flawless instructions. I replaced the default 5400 RPM 1TB hard disk with a Samsung EVO 850 500GB SSD (2.5” drive style). Everything went off without a hitch, the computer is fast, and everything (including front light) works great.

(Two quick things: 1. There’s a black sticker that looks like a rounded rectangle that holds the SATA connector to the hard drive itself. Remove that and replace it on the new drive. The antenna cable is difficult to get back on.

I’ve done many of these on other Macs. Put the screw back in first and line it up. You’ll get it.). I did this!!! Many thanks to Sam and iFixit, as the mini was pretty well unusable with its original HDD after upgrading to High Sierra. I replaced it with a Crucial MX300 SSD and it now purrs quite happily.

My only bodge was to use a bit of welding rod bent to shape as the logic board lever tool. I formatted the SSD to a GUID partition map first of course then fitted it and ran the High Sierra upgrade which updates to APFS blah blah blah but you know it makes sense. Thanks again iFixit and Sam Lionheart. These tear down notes were awesome. Replacing my HDD with the Samsung SSD 850 EVO went very well! Great instructions.

I however am not able to set the partition scheme to GUID. I’m not sure if I missed that step in the first time I formatted the SSD. Now when I go to disk utilities there is NO OPTION for setting the partition scheme to GUID. Mac OS X will not install without the scheme set to GUID.

CAN ANYONE HELP ME? Is it possible to force the reformat/erase in disk utility, or some other utility to set the partition scheme to GUID? I do have my old HDD connected to my Mac mini via a SATA/USB cable and am able to boot from it. There is not “media line” in DU, so the option to re-partition the SSD is not even there. If anyone could point me to the right information that would help me greatly.

Indispensable guide. I used it and the iFixit tools in conjunction with a YouTube video and the process was scary but surprisingly easy.

(After all, I understand these things are originally assembled by 10-year olds.) I swapped out the 500gb hard drive on my infuriatingly slow late 2014 Mac Mini with a 500gb Samsung 860 EVO SSD and I am frankly astonished at the gain in speed. It is like having a brand new computer.

I spent less than $150, including the drive and the iFixit tools. Far less cursing in my house now, I thank you for such a clear, concise guide. This guide was indispensable.

I have a 2014 (late? I can’t remember and I can’t find out because the machine is literally downloading the new OS in recovery mode as I type (on my MBP)) MacMini. Before the surgery, my Mini had the 1GB HD that it came with. Needless to say, it was painfully slow. I purchased the tools recommended on this site and followed all of the instructions.

In the end I installed a brand new 500GB Samsung 860 EVO SSD HD in my MacMini. Thus far everything seems to be working correctly. Hopefully, I will get the speed gain that I understand comes from swapping out a spinning drive for an SSD. I’m so excited! Thanks iFixit.

I just want to follow-up. I have been using the computer with the new SSD in it and I can’t believe what a difference it has made. Frank Hughes wrote that it was like having a brand new computer and I am in FULL agreement with him. Prior to the SSD it would take perhaps a minute or more to open word or excel. Now the icon literally bounces AT MOST 5 times and the application is open and ready to go.

This goes for all of my other apps too: iTunes (which seems to open nearly instantly now), Pixelmator, Acrobat, etc. I rarely wanted to open anything on that machine because it took FOREVER! The entire thing was sluggish; it took forever to process anything. The startup time has dropped DRAMATICALLY! It went from minutes to less than one. I could go on. Anyhow, I would recommend this upgrade to ANYONE!

You won’t be disappointed. It might sound crazy but it took me 45 min - to an hr to finish. One thing about sliding the assembly board in, i.e. When you are doing the steps backwards, is that there is squishy pad on left and clip on the righ (when viewing mac mini from bottom) if you carefully observe and then it becomes easy to get the assembly in or out if you think about it. Also I had congested nose that dad and my kid had a cold as well so she was getting cranky. I couldn’t resist but had Glenfeddich 14year old while doing the upgrade to 480gb ssd to a 2014 Mac mini. So it is not so bad.

Cable

Just watch the views couple of times, be gentle and question your action before executing it. You will do absolutely fine. For my mid-2011 Mac Mini I had to skip steps and read comments to know that. This guide was step by step on the money for me. For those, thinking about getting a regular hard drive ONLY versus a fusion drive which is your SATA + SSD; I highly recommend the added $100 for the fusion drive. When you replace that spinning disk with your own SSD, the chasis has that extra SSD attached to it.

That translates into even more SSD storage you can partition/reformat and use! Anyways, AWESOME write-up. I have the Mac Mini removal tool, the splunger, and 64 bit driver kit. All worth the money, IMHO. I just did this with a new system never having booted it.

Power on while holding T key to get virgin mini in target mode. Connect mini by thunderbolt cable to 2nd mac where the unformatted SSD also is located in a SATA dock. Use SuperDuper to clone the mini’s factory image onto the SSD. Cleanly unmount/eject/disconnect everything. Install SSD using these instructions. First real boot of new mini runs initial setup from SSD just as if Apple had shipped it that way.

All this worked for me on the first try. One could do this in reverse order - install SSD first then clone factory image back into the mini using target mode, but I thought it was safer to capture the image before taking anything apart.

My Mac Mini late 2014 1.4GHz i5 with 4 GB RAM sluggish at best as OS X El Capitan (10.11.6) averages 6-8 GB RAM routinely. The OSX is constantly moving active memory from RAM to HD (the base 5400 rpm HGST 25K500-500 HD). Booting was 15-30 seconds and from application to application. Shame on Apple! I decided to swap out the HD with an SSD.

I decided on a Samsung EVO 1 TB SSD. I followed this EXCELLENT guide and replaced the HD with the SSD without much of a problem except removing the HD SATA cable was difficult and I broke the cable. Ordered a replacement. Now, my Mac Mini Late 2014 boots in about 5 seconds and literally flies from application to application like my old Mini did or probably slightly faster. Bottom line, Apple should have NEVER put the 5400 rpm HGST HD in a machine with such low memory as the operating system typically uses 6-7 GB RAM. So get rid of the HD for a SSD!

Don’t waste your money with the PCIe slot either (yes the connector is there) but more $$ than a sata SSD! Completed the replacement of the normal hard drive with a Kingston A400 SSD without iFixit’s Repair kit. I used a cut piece from a coat hanger for the metal logic board removal tool.

Small tweezers, a finished ball point pen, guitar picks and a good flashlight helped a lot to finish the process without hassle. I also used the SuperDuper! App (on trial - didn’t purchase it since it was mostly for a one-time thing) to clone my old hard drive that came with the MacMini. Since the SSD was 480GB and the old drive was 500GB in capacity, I was able to do a successful clone. To connect the new SSD to the MacMini for the cloning I used a cheap SATA SSD enclosure.

It took around 5 hours to clone the drive completely but it was well worth it. I use XCODE and the improvements were massive. The metal retaining clip in Step 26 is used to keep the AC-In connector in Step 27 from rotating.

All in all, it was a great success. Thank you iFixit and the people who commented for this great guide. Wouldn’t be able to do it without you!

Drive Dock's unique design makes hot-swapping a breeze. Two drive bays accommodate both 2.5' and 3.5' drives and can access a drive in each simultaneously. Each bay features its own independent power switch and LED activity monitor. Dual Thunderbolt 2 ports deliver extreme-speed data transfers, and support daisy-chain expansion with up to five additional Thunderbolt devices.

Drive Dock also includes a USB 3.0 port for versatile compatibility and the auto-switching internal power supply is compatible with any dual prong cable. Drive Dock is flexible enough to use on almost any system. It works perfectly as an on-location backup solution, or for industry professionals using multiple bare drives. Featuring rugged aluminum construction, quiet, fanless operation, and complete with USB 3.0 and Thunderbolt cables, the OWC Drive Dock is an essential component to any high-demand workflow.

Note: To use this Drive Dock with the 3.5' Toshiba X300 Series 4.0, 5.0, or 6.0 TB hard drives, please review the following. This issue does not impact other 3.5' hard drives, regardless of brand. To use this Drive Dock with the 3.5' Toshiba X300 Series 4.0, 5.0, or 6.0 TB hard drives, please review the following. This issue does not impact other 3.5' hard drives, regardless of brand. Thunderbolt benchmark testing performed by OWC in September 2015 using a 2.6GHz Intel quad-core i7 15-inch MacBook Pro with 16GB RAM and 1TB SSD. Tests conducted on 1 TB OWC Mercury Electra 6G SSDs.

Tested using QuickBench™ 5.0 Extended Test (20-100 MB) over 10 cycles, cache disabled. Results represent the extended test average. USB 3.0 benchmark testing performed by OWC in September 2015 using a 2.6GHz Intel quad-core i7 15-inch MacBook Pro with 16GB RAM and 1TB SSD. Tests conducted on 1 TB OWC Mercury Electra 6G SSDs.

Tested using QuickBench™ 5.0 Extended Test (20-100 MB) over 10 cycles, cache disabled. Results represent the extended test average.

RAID 0 Thunderbolt benchmark testing performed by OWC in November 2015 using a 2.6GHz Intel quad-core i7 15-inch MacBook Pro with 16 GB RAM and 1 TB SSD. Tests conducted on two 1 TB Toshiba DT01ACA Series hard drives with 32 MB data buffers in a SoftRAID 5.1 Lite RAID 0configuration. Tested using QuickBench™ 5.0 Extended Test (20-100 MB) over 10 cycles, cache disabled. Results represent the extended test average. RAID 0 USB 3.0 benchmark testing performed by OWC in November 2015 using a 2.6GHz Intel quad-core i7 15-inch MacBook Pro with 16 GB RAM and 1 TB SSD. Tests conducted on two 1 TB Toshiba DT01ACA Series hard drives with 32 MB data buffers in a SoftRAID 5.1 Lite RAID 0 configuration.

Tested using QuickBench™ 5.0 Extended Test (20-100 MB) over 10 cycles, cache disabled. Results represent the extended test average. Manufacturer provided specifications for Other World Computing p/n TB2U3DKR2 UPC#: 83. Warranty The best warranty is one you never have to use - but should the need occur - we're proud to provide a superior level of support and service coverage to our customers.

OWC is proud to provide a superior level of support and warranty coverage to our customers. Even when not used, we understand the peace of mind afforded by a longer warranty period. OWC's industry leading coverage is a testament to our confidence in the reliability of the solutions that we offer. OWC solutions are engineered to demanding quality standards in order to deliver the most reliable, highest performance available on the market in each storage category. Verified Buyer Reviewer: DockedAndSpeedy Location: Perth, Western Australia Age: 55-65 Experience Level: IT Professional Owned Product: less than a month Rating: 5/5 Saved my much-loved iMac! July 12, 2018 I was on the verge of getting rid of my old iMac 2011 as a workhorse for editing because it bogged down so easily.

I didn't want to take the risk of installing an internal SSD and pulling apart such an old machine, fearing some bits would be more fragile. I'd looked into external enclosures and carefully researched how much faster a thunderbolt drive would be than the FireWire800 (I already use with a Drobo). However, I use a 2nd monitor and all the small drive solutions were end-of-chain with a single port. With the Dock I was able to put a 500GB SSD in there AND daisy-chain to my display.

My machine is now so fast again I'm not just using it for writing, I effectively got it back as a development machine. I have not had a single hardware purchase deliver such value and relief. I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: PDUBS Location: Vancouver, BC Experience Level: Power User Owned Product: 3-4 months Rating: 5/5 Ability to turn on/off drives independently July 1, 2018 Great dock.

Looks and feels pretty solid. I was looking for a external hard drive solution with moving to a laptop from a mac pro and this dock seems to be a great fit for what I was looking for. The ability to have 2 drives on at the same time or individually. This allows me to have two external drives like typical 2 drive enclosures however, I can keep one offline and bring online only when needed to keep my backup safe. Highly recommend this product. I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from.

Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: JayDE1 Location: Smyrna, Delaware Age: 55-65 Experience Level: IT Professional Owned Product: 1-3 months Rating: 5/5 Nice and Easy! February 16, 2018 This caddy is very versatile. I have a lot of hard drives of various sizes and to be able to use them the way I want is great.

Raid, no problem on Mac! I've already used it to fully clone data laden drives I don't want to loose. Great construction of the unit with the added feature of getting a usb and firewire cable included. I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos.

Verified Buyer Top 250 Contributor Reviewer: DrDave Location: Maryland Age: 55-65 Experience Level: Power User Owned Product: less than a month Rating: 5/5 Excellent Dual Drive Dock! January 22, 2018 I bought this to keep two HDDs running daily and weekly incremental backups of my system, which I then rotate each week, storing them (using the disk storage items previously reviewed) in my fireproof, waterproof, safe. I then replace them with the two new drives and repeat the cycle for the next week. This way I have bootable HDDs for my system with daily and weekly increments allowing me to go back in time as far as needed, along with my Time Machine backups.

So I should be fairly safe! I upgraded from the single HDD dock, which worked extremely well for a few years, so I anticipate the same solid performance from this dock.

I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos.

Verified Buyer Reviewer: marka Location: Seattle, WA Age: 55-65 Owned Product: 1-3 months Rating: 5/5 Fast, easy, reliable. January 11, 2018 I've been using this dual drive dock for nearly a month now. It's fast and performs just as expected. Thunderbolt is an amazing technology and this dock does justice to its incredible speed. I've used it most of the time with two 12TB drives. I chose this dock because it supports large capacity drives. The unit is solidly built.

The AC adapter is built into the dock so no external AC adapter is needed. Bear in mind, however, that both hard drives are served through a single interface.

This means you won't get the same speeds blazing accessing both drives at once. I would highly recommend this unit I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: Gooey Location: Knoxville, TN Age: 45-54 Experience Level: Power User Owned Product: 1-3 months Rating: 5/5 Outstanding Product October 9, 2017 I really like this dock.

It's very well made and works great with my circa 2011 27' iMac. I have used the USB 3.0 only version of the Drive Dock and this Thunderbolt version has a great feature the USB one lacks - you have to hold the power buttons down for 3 seconds to turn off the power to a particular drive. This prevents accidentally powering off a drive when inserting or removing one - something I did with the USB-only version. This dock is well-made and just works. Highly recommended. I would recommend this item to a friend!

This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: Mesha Location: New Haven, CT Age: 25-34 Experience Level: Hobbiest Owned Product: 1-3 months Rating: 5/5 Excellent Product June 15, 2017 I really enjoy this product.

I do a lot of video and photo editing, and that requires using lots of SSDs. I found out that buying SSD/HDD without enclosures to be cheaper than buying an external drive. For that reason, I decided to buy this product. I love it and would definitely consider buying a similar product if it was available with thunderbolt 3. I would recommend this item to a friend!

This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: Chuck1983 Location: Lexington, KY Age: 45-54 Experience Level: IT Professional Owned Product: over 6 months Rating: 5/5 This is my second OWC Drive Dock! April 4, 2017 I purchased an identical OWC Drive Dock last November and I liked it so much that I came back and purchased a second one.

The Thunderbolt connectivity was the deal maker for me. I am using the two Drive Docks all day, every day with absolutely no problems. If I could give it 10 stars, I would.

I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: RicM Location: Providence, RI Age: 55-65 Experience Level: Power User Owned Product: over 6 months Rating: 3/5 Disappointing February 5, 2017 This dock has 2 drive slots but only one SATA controller.

I was hoping to use it for super fast transfer between SSD drives in the 2 slots, but because of the single controller I cannot achieve the 500MBS transfer that I expected. I bought this to use on a film shoot where we needed to transfer LARGE amounts of data (1 TB/day at times) for Pro Res HQ video footage. Don't be fooled by claims of how fast the Thunderbolt connection is, it doesn't mean anything if the controller can't handle the bandwidth.

The specs on a lot of T-Bolt drive products talk about how fast the bus is without ever mentioning how fast the disk or controller is. The bus speed is irrelevant. The slowest link in the chain is the limiting factor.

Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Pro

I would recommend this item to a friend! This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Top 250 Contributor Reviewer: BW79ST Location: New York City Age: Over 65 Experience Level: Home User Owned Product: 1-3 months Rating: 4/5 Works as advertised!

February 1, 2017 A Mac is very touchy about moving drives around, as I have found. The Drive Dock is not at fault but if you get one you do have to be very careful about removing drives that may be still spinning.

I've corrupted a drive a couple of times when not paying attention to what I was doing so there is a learning curve, or at least there was for me. The drives had been backed up and were easily reformatted so nothing was lost, but I learned to be careful. Sometimes if you leave drives mounted on your desktop and walk away for a long period you will find them dismounted when you return and with a warning to properly dismount them! That is a function of the iMac, and not of the OWC Drive Dock, as far as I'm concerned. A good product but there are caveats.

This review is from. Customer Videos. Verified Buyer Reviewer: Raspberry Experience Level: Power User Rating: 5/5 OWC Dual Dock was Good Performance bootable to compatiblity El Capitan January 4, 2017 OWC Dual Dock was Good Performance bootable to compatiblity El Capitan. This is very kindly set in 'OWC Thunderbolt 2 cable' and 'USB 3.0 cable' including package. In my MacBookPro 2011 model, using from internal OSX 10.8.5 to external Dual Dock with the ElCapitan 10.11.6.

Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Mac

At that time, starting from OSX 10.8.5 and from the internal drive, Thunderbolt 2 Dual Dock is recognized as an external HDD made in Thunderbolt 1 with MacBook Pro 2011. I could safely run the external OWC Dual Dock as a startup drive with confidence. I would recommend this item to a friend!

Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac Free

This review is from. Customer Videos.

Hot Sale For New Dual Hard Drive Ssd Flex Cable For Mac