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New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
#27353 11/09/13 10:19 PM
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The SSDs are so expensive, can I buy one with a small SSD drive and put in a 1TB 'mechanical' drive?


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Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
slolerner #27354 11/09/13 11:04 PM
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Nope. The redesigned MacBook Pros are too thin to accommodate disk drives. (Unless you opt for the older, non-Retina model.)



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Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
dkmarsh #27356 11/09/13 11:17 PM
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Thanks!


Mid 2010 MacBook Pro 13"
2.4GHz, 750GB SATA HD, 8 GB RAM, OS 10.7.5
1 HDX1500 2TB Ext.HD, 2 HDX1500 1TB Ext.HD
HP Laserjet 6MP printing postscript via 10/100 Intel print server
Netgear WN2500RP Range Extender (Ira rocks!)
Linksys WRT1900AC Wireless Router
Brother MFC-9340CDW Color Laser
iPad Air
Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
slolerner #27362 11/10/13 04:10 AM
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In addition to being too thin, they no longer use the same interface. Spinning-rust drives communicate using a SATA connector. Apple's newest Retina Macbook Pros now talk to the SSD using a PCIe connector, which is far faster, but not yet standard. (Previous generations of SSDs have used the slower SATA connector because the older SSDs were not yet fast enough that the SATA connector was an issue, and because it made it easy to simply plug them in place of a spinning-rust drive. The new generations of SSDs are very fast, so Apple chose to connect them through the fastest interface they could, but it's still hard to find PCIe SSDs on the open market. You can do it, but they're eyewateringly expensive.)


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Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
tacit #27366 11/10/13 06:57 PM
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Does that mean that it will now be very hard to find a SSD to trick-out my 13" (2011?) MBP? I saw a YouTube video of someone doing it.


Mid 2010 MacBook Pro 13"
2.4GHz, 750GB SATA HD, 8 GB RAM, OS 10.7.5
1 HDX1500 2TB Ext.HD, 2 HDX1500 1TB Ext.HD
HP Laserjet 6MP printing postscript via 10/100 Intel print server
Netgear WN2500RP Range Extender (Ira rocks!)
Linksys WRT1900AC Wireless Router
Brother MFC-9340CDW Color Laser
iPad Air
Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
slolerner #27367 11/10/13 07:50 PM
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No. It seems to me that tacit's comments refer to the current MacBook Pro models with PCIe interface. Your late 2011 model (MacBookPro8,1, MD313LL/A) has the SATA 3 interface for which less expensive (but slower) SSDs are still amply available. Technically the upgrade is listed as moderately difficult by iFixIt.


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Re: New MacBook Pro--putting in a larger drive
slolerner #27440 11/19/13 04:20 AM
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that macfixit article shows replacing the optical drive with an ssd.

one thing to watch out for - bus speed. Way, way back, I pulled the ODD out of a G3 and replaced it with a hard drive. I was upset to find it accessed at around half the speed of the boot drive or other drives in the computer. Switching drives didn't help, the upper bay remained a problem. Come to find out, that interface to up there was ATA33, and the others were all ATA66.

So you may want to actually move your HDD into the optical drive carrier, and put the SSD in where the hard drive goes. YMMV, report back results, I haven't tried it recently. In this case the ODD is sata, but it may be 1.5 vs 3.0 for the hdd, as an example.

Last edited by alternaut; 11/20/13 02:39 AM. Reason: Reply moved from thread 'Mid 2010 MacBook Pro Black Screen Again', where it was posted erroneously; title adjusted.

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Moderated by  alternaut, dianne, MacManiac 

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