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Black Magic Disk Test Thunderbolt Adapter comparisons
Hi, while waiting for my BTO iMac 27" to arrive, I've been doing some research and testing on TB adapters.
One of the reasons I did this was to see if my decision to go with a 1TB HDD and then use a TB SSD as a boot disk was a good one (relative to getting a Fusion drive or GOD FORBID the Apple $$D option. I'm satisfied that it was a good call... especially if I stripe a couple of drives in the J4. I used Black Magic Disk Test; will post screen captures if I must, but here are some interesting results: Test Bed: Late 2011 MacBook Pro; Core i7; 16gb ram; internal HDD bay = Crucial M4 256 SSD; optical bay = 750 Gb HDD (stock disk, moved to optibay adapter); Apple TB cable Notes: disk tests rounded up from 1 decimal place. Pegasus J4 enclosure 1. Pegasus J4 TB enclosure, Samsung 840 256 Gb SSD; (running as boot drive): Write: 269 — Read: 4282. Pegasus J4 TB enclosure, Samsung 840 256 Gb SSD; (non-boot drive): Write: 236 — Read: 506Internal Sata connections 3. Internal HDD bay, Crucial M4 256 Gb SSD; (running as boot drive): Write: 261 — Read: 5004. Internal HDD bay, Crucial M4 256 Gb SSD; (non-boot drive): Write: 260 — Read: 5005. Internal HDD optibay, original 750 Gb HDD: Write: 72 — Read: 99Seagate GoFlex TB Adapter 6. GoFlex TB adapter, Samsung 840 256 Gb SSD; (running as boot drive): Write: 239 — Read: 3777. GoFlex TB adapter, Samsung 840 256 Gb SSD; (non-boot drive): Write: 239 — Read: 3728. GoFlex TB adapter, Seagate Sata3 2TB HDD: Write: 187 — Read: 183My comments: it would appear (and this is borne out by other's results) that the Pegasus J4 has a better TB implementation than the Seagate adapter especially for read tests; it is also more expensive. One of the best things about the J4 is that it will hold 4 drives and you can stripe a pair in raid 0 for READICULOUS speeds... As far as which is better, the Sammy or the Crucial, I really couldn't say at this point. I found it interesting that I got a better Read test on the Sammy when it was NOT the boot drive; while the Crucial M4 was virtually unaffected by this... although that could be accounted for by the M4 being an internal drive. And no, I'm not taking out the M4 and putting a Sammy in for testing purposes... I just want my iMac to get here before I start testing different Ram configurations in the pets... which would be messy and create problems with the wife and probably the authorities... Hope this may be helpful to someone. Les |
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bonedaddio,
Thanks for the test! I've been looking around at what type of results people would get with the J4. As you stated one of the benefits is that it allows for 4 2.5" drives and allows for RAID configurations. Quick question which Samsung 840 256GB did you use? Was this the PRO model or just the standard 840? The READ performances look great, although I would have thought the WRITE would have been higher which is why I'm asking. Thanks!
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2012 - 27" iMac i7, | 2012 - MacMini i5 | 2012 Sony Vaio Z - Win8 2009 - MacBook Pro 17" | 2011 Lenovo T400 | 2008 Water Cooled PC Marqelexsis Photography | Facebook |
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#3 |
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Did you have to use the Promise drivers, or can the J4 be used driverless? I'm also contemplating putting a couple of 840 Pros as Raid 0 in the J4.
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#4 | |
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Quote:
I did download and install the latest drivers from the Promise website. ADDITIONAL NOTE: So far, I'm having some difficulty sorting out the J4 in Windoze 7; it's a driver issue. The J4 is not sold as compatible with Windows, they only state Mac OSX. There is often a way around this kind of thing, but maybe not. OTOH, the Seagate shows up and loads a working driver in both OSX & Win7 automatically. So the J4 MIGHT NOT be suitable for Bootcamp... we'll see. It's early yet in the process. |
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#5 | |
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Quote:
I have a single 512gb 840 pro model as boot on a WD MyBook TB Duo and it writes in the 3xx's and reads in the 4xx's on that test with varying results. I am convinced however that it would spec better inside the imac.
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{2012 27imac-3.4i7-680mx-32gb ram-768SSD+External TB Samsung840pro ssd + TB velociraptors-UAD Apollo/Marantz/Amphion/Bowers&Wilkins Sound-Impulse 61} {ipads}{iphones} |
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#6 |
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bonedaddio: Thanks for the info clarification! Based on your test results, you are getting inline performance from the J4 for that version SSD (Samsung rated #'s show 540 Write / 250 Read). Hopefully they'l fix the Windows compatibility issue in future driver releases.
xgman: Your 840 PRO would spec better inside the system from some of the benchmarks I have seen within these threads. As bonedaddio stated in the start of the thread the enclosure implementations are making a difference in the performances you can see.
__________________
2012 - 27" iMac i7, | 2012 - MacMini i5 | 2012 Sony Vaio Z - Win8 2009 - MacBook Pro 17" | 2011 Lenovo T400 | 2008 Water Cooled PC Marqelexsis Photography | Facebook |
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#7 |
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The Go Flex is DATED now, and is not even a current model!
As I've posted in several threads, I have a regular, old Samsung 830 (yes, 830) 256GB running in the current Seagate Backup Plus 2.5" Thunderbolt adapter and getting the following in BlackMagic, connected to my late-2012 iMac. 365MB/s read and 320MB/s writes. The Go Flex needs to Go Away! |
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#8 |
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I just received a new:
Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter for Backup Plus Portable Drives Model: STAE128 Regulatory Model: SRD0001 Part Number: 9ZH9PU-RAA Label: Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Portab...d_rhf_gw_p_t_1 My older unit is: Seagate GoFlex 1 TB Ultra-Portable External Hard Drive for Mac with Thunderbolt Adapter Model: STBA1000104 Regulatory Model: SRD0001 Part Number: 9ZH9PN-RAA Label: Seagate GoFlex Adapter Thunderbolt http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Ultra-.../dp/B007IJ7T4G They look identical, and it is misleading that both units have the same "Model: SRD0001" printed just under the title name. I will try to run some tests with the same SSD on both units to try to quantify the differences. Hopefully, the above information may be helpful to others to identify which they have, or which they are buying. -howard EDIT: Well this is discouraging .... they are both the same speed with a Crucial M4 256GB: I get the same results with AJA Disk Test program. Left: GoFlex .... ... .... Right: BackupPlus (4GB test file size option) . Last edited by hfg; Jan 4, 2013 at 08:05 PM. Reason: add test results |
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#9 |
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Yes, please...eagerly awaiting your results. I for one am looking to get the seagate stae128....
__________________
------------------------------------------------ 2011 27" iMac 3.1ghz 256gb SSD, 2x Ipad 2, Ipad 3, IPhone 4, IPod Touch, IPod mini. |
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#10 |
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Are these tests all done without the need to connect the drives to an outlet?
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#11 |
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#12 |
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Has anyone tried OCZ Vertex 4 or Agility 4 with any of TB enclosures?
Esp. Vertex 4 seems to have good write speeds compared to other SSD, I'm wondering if I could get 3xx/3xx via TB... I guess write speeds matter in video conversions, file copying and similar write intensive data. Inside Mid/Late 2011 Macbook Pro I'm getting 455 read / 400 write in Blackmagic 5GB test. For comparison, my 11" Air only does 445/240 and even my 2007 iMac (SataII) does 240/230 with OCZ Agility 4. |
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#13 |
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Just for comparison: Thunderbolt vs. USB-3.0
Here is the same Crucial M4 256GB as above but in a USB-3 ONYX MINIPRO enclosure: . |
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#14 |
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Windows Booting from Thunderbolt Adapter/Enclosures
I need a bootable Windows environment on my iMac, and don't want to use any of my internal 768GB SSD. So, I am very interested in keeping my Windows external to the iMac (for now ... maybe open it later and install inside) with the highest speed possible. I have been able to create/install a Windows 8 boot disk using a Samsung SSD mounted on the Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter, and it seems to run very well. However, I did try to relocate the Samsung SSD with Windows on it over to the LaCie "Little Big Disk" Thunderbolt enclosure, and the ONYX MINIPORT USB 3.0 enclosure. Both enclosures started the boot, but stopped with an error that it couldn't find an important part. I did not try any repair attempts because I didn't want to have to start over, however I did notice that the Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter flashed what appeared to be a BIOS message on the screen at the start of the boot process ... this was not present when booting from the LaCie or ONYX enclosures which may explain why Windows didn't run on those enclosures. I have not tried fresh installing to either of those enclosures yet which may attach the "missing part" and run. -howard |
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#15 | |
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Quote:
Yes, I found the GoFlex adapter to be perfectly fine for booting Win7 in a TB enclosure. The J4 is definitely some faster, and has 4 drive bays, costs more, and seems (so far) to have a driver issue with Windows 7. I'll probably use the J4 for MAC boot, and the GoFlex for Windows 7 at least temporarily. My 27" BTO gets here next Wednesday; then we'll see what's what.
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#16 |
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I found the above to be not true in my testing of my 256GB Samsung 830. I get the exact same speeds with all of the following:
Seagate Backup Plus 2.5" Thunderbolt adapter (bus-powered) Seagate Backup Plus 3.5" Thunderbolt adapter (AC-powered) BUFFALO Ministation 2.5" Thunderbolt enclosure (bus-powered) In each case I get 365MB/s reads, and 320MB/s writes. |
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#17 | |
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Quote:
Thanks, -howard |
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#18 |
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it is possible to use the goflex tb adapter with a 512 gb ssd or is the power supply to low ?
thx |
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#19 | |
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Quote:
PN: 9ZH9PU-RAA Model: SRD0001 So it's a different part number than what the Go Flex is. |
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#20 |
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Well, WilliamG, you've about convinced me to send the GoFlex desktop adapter back. The similar, newer model is about $30.00 cheaper anyway. In your testing, did you try them as the boot drive vs. system drive? I got some slight but interesting variations.
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#21 | |
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Quote:
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#22 | |
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Pegasus J4 bootable?????
Quote:
I would like to ask you how did you manage to boot from J4 to your macbook, cause I've been trying to do that on a 27'model imac (i72600 16gb ram 2011 model)and I just can't. Until I saw that thread of yours, I thought that the damn thing is not bootable. You see, you have to install the promise driver for your OS to see that. I am using 4 seagate 7200.4 momentus drives 500GB each and it BMD test gives me 365mb/sec write and 375 read speeds on raid 0 config. Raid 1 isn't worth mentioning. I also own the bus powered thunderbolt adapter. You can't get higher than 375 read speed on a sandisk extreme and 245 write speed respectively. Similar results for the intel 520 with slightly better write speed 255mb/sec. The highest you could get from that adaptor is 380 read , 374 write with OCZ vertex 4 and the newer vector model. That's it! I have also purchased a desktop dc powered seagate model but I don't think I will get higher speeds. Question remains How did you manage to boot from J4. Can't seem to be able to install the macosx on the raid 0 configuration. Please help. |
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#23 | |
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Quote:
Some say that you need the external bus power to reach maximum speeds, especially with larger SSDs. YMMV. Good luck, let us know how this turns out. BTW, I heard back from Promise Support (pretty quickly, I might add) about the J4 windows boot issues: Request:- 4th January 2013 at 6:54I wouldn't be surprised that will release a windows driver, as this is a very fast and the most affordable multi-drive TB setup out there; Windows compatibility would add a considerable additional market. Last edited by bonedaddio; Jan 5, 2013 at 03:04 PM. |
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#24 | |
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Quote:
I am confused about this OS X boot issue as well as I consider purchasing a J4. If a "OS X driver" is required to access the J4 hardware, how does that "driver" get installed at boot time in order to read the J4 for booting? If you boot from an internal drive which installs the driver ... then you can access the J4 for data storage without problems. -howard |
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#25 |
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It's a good question... I already had an OSX ML installation working. I downloaded and installed the latest driver, then turned on the J4 (with a Sammy 840 installed), initialized and installed in Disk Utility, then used Recovery Partition/Apple Cloud installer/Time Machine backup restore, and I could then boot (using Option at the "chime") into my internal SSD OSX ML, my J4 external OSX ML, or my external Win7 bootcamp on the Seagate GoFlex TB desktop adapter. It all just worked, and quite well. I'm looking forward to getting my new iMac setup with this (that's what it's all for, really, not the MacBook Pro, but it's what I had available with a TB port!).
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