Ga door naar hoofdinhoud

Originally released on January 22, 2005, the Mac mini is a small form-factor desktop computer made by Apple Inc. Currently, it is one of the four desktop models in the Macintosh lineup, and serves mainly as an alternative to the all-in-one iMac.

872 Vragen Bekijk alle
Vraag afgerond

SSD in the optibay as the primary disk for OS X

Can I use an SSD in the optibay as the primary disk for OS X? I have a Mac mini mid 2010, and would like to replace the optical drive to an SSD with an optibay. In your 2nd hdd installation guide, you put the SSD into the optibay. It seems like you can use the SSD as a primary disk for OS X becuase most people use the SSD for the OS. Or should I connect the SSD to where the old HDD is placed and the old HDD to the optibay?

Thanks.

Beantwoord deze vraag Dit probleem heb ik ook

Is dit een goede vraag?

Score 0
Voeg een opmerking toe

2 Antwoorden

Yes -

If this Answer is helpful please remember to return and mark it Accepted.

Was dit antwoord nuttig?

Score 0

2 opmerkingen:

I din't understand....

Where should I put SSD (with OS X)?

In Optibay? or to where the old HDD is placed?..

And why?...

door

I misunderstood your original question. You should 'put the OS on one of the standard drive points... the system wants to sleep the optibay which has been known to cause problems.

door

Voeg een opmerking toe
Dit antwoord was oorspronkelijk aan een andere vraag gericht.

Both the HD & Optical bay have SATA II connections. So you could put the HD or SSD in either location in this model (other models have a PATA optical drive).

Ideally, the SSD should be mounted in the optical bay as you would need to do less work in swapping things around. The HD temp sensor is better used on the HD Vs SSD.

Just follow the guide its quite simple.

Was dit antwoord nuttig?

Score 0

4 opmerkingen:

See this article about drive locations & reasons.

door

Some old stuff here Machead - I have over 40 MacBook Pro's with SSD's in the optical drive carrier (we have mostly SATA II SSD's but a few SATA III on the newer MBP's). I have ML on these systems with the latest EFI firmware. I also disable the hibernation services as well. We don't have freezing or beach ball issues.

door

I should point out we do the reverse on the older PATA optical drive MBP systems. Putting the HD in the optical drive spot. We did notice the HD's didn't do as well after they where moved. As we were planning on upgrading them any ways at the end of the fiscal year a few years ago we didn't bother fixing them. Most of the staff work on site in trailers or offices so they aren't bouncing the systems when they are running. Which could explain why we didn't have that many failures.

door

I have heard that some of the HD's had no motion sensors ( a reason not to put them in optibays). Explaining the "disable hibernation" step would probably be beneficial. As well as disabling/unchecking/changing "put the HD to sleep when able" setting. No one mentions shorter battery life...but probably not as bad running an SSD and an HD, or two SSDs compared to two HDs. It's all a mater of trade offs, and, to some extent trying to have a laptop stand in for what a desktop wold normally accomplish.

door

Voeg een opmerking toe
Weergavestatistieken:

Afgelopen 24 uren: 0

Afgelopen 7 dagen: 0

Afgelopen 30 dagen: 0

Altijd: 564