Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
Status
The first post of this thread is a WikiPost and can be edited by anyone with the appropiate permissions. Your edits will be public.
I installed today a 120GB Kingston SSD msata into my Powerbook G4 1,5:
IMG_1694.jpg

Original Hitachi 60GB speed was 39.
 
To my surprise the prices have dropped a lot, I found a 240 GB Kingston SUV500MS for 50 EUR whereas previously my 64GB mSATA SSD cost nearly 35-40 EUR , upgrading my PB 12" for MacPorts , more VM's and for the PowerPC Challenge.

Hopefully I can also fix my 2nd PB 12" which died (heatsink loose) after my attempt to upgrade to a Hynix 64GB mSATA SSD, aaah, challenges ...
 
  • Like
Reactions: AphoticD
Machine: PowerBook G4 1.5 Ghz
Energy Saving: Highest Processor Performance
SSD: Super Talent Duradrive ET3 PATA SSD 64 GB
-> http://www.supertalent.com/datasheets/6_10070.pdf
-> http://www.supertalent.com/products/ssd_product_detail.php?parent=others&category=DuraDrive&type=105
-> https://www.ebay.com/itm/Super-Tale...852807&hash=item4ae68acae7:g:SSAAAOSwqu9VA-PC
Adapter: NA
Purchased: 2015
Price: 91,7 EUR shipped in Europe from Ebay Italy

So in light of the upcoming Challenge and needing a clean install for Macports so I can fork smtube and become it's co-maintaner and always needing space for Virtual Machines :)

an upgrade from the above to a Kingston mSATA SSD 240Gb .

Machine: Powerbook G4 1,5 Ghz
SSD: Kingston UV500 mSATA 240 GB
scored from a nearby shop since I could pick it up returning from work.
(Dutch/Flemish website)

https://www.alternate.be/Kingston/UV500-240-GB-SSD/html/product/1445031?lk=7964
Adapter: Lindy mSATA to IDE adapter
scored from Amazon.de since it was unavailable near by for another 3 weeks

https://www.amazon.de/LINDY-mSATA-Z...id=1549039574&sr=8-1&keywords=lindy+msata+ide
Purchased: January 2019
Price: 49 EUR for the mSATA SSD picked up locally
45 EUR for the adapter from Amazon.de

Energy Saving: Highest Processor Performance
On charger:

Xbench Kingston mSATA Charger Better Performanc.png

On battery:

Xbench Kingston mSATA Battery Better Performanc.png


Speed is 3-4x the IDE SSD, machine feels snappier but still haven't thrown any large VM's with lots of loading onto it, battery (Newertech) life does seems to suffer more now.

Here is the IDE SSD benchmark from 2015

Xbench SuperTalent IDE SSD.png
 
As an Amazon Associate, MacRumors earns a commission from qualifying purchases made through links in this post.
  • Like
Reactions: AphoticD
Last year I reported 301.40 on Leopard on my Quad G5 using the internal bus connected to an SSD. Today I obtained a Seritek 2ME4-2 eSATA card on the cheap and tested it out.

eSATA.png

Using a spare Samsung EVO 850 inside a Vantec NexStar eSATA enclosure (it also does USB 3.0) and hooking it the enclosure as an external drive to the eSATA ports I just installed.

When I looked at raw throughput via QuickBench and ZoneBench (from Intech's Speedtools), it was much faster than the internal SSD-in-enclosure was (up to about 220 MB/s on reads versus about 135 MB/s)...

ZoneBench - eSATA.png

but the XBench disk test barely moved, up to 305.79.

XBench - eSATA.png
 
Machine: PowerBook G4 17" 1.67GHz DLSD (A1139/PowerBook5,9)
SSD: Dogfish 256GB NGFF m.2 2280 SSD (via IDE-to-m.2 adapter)
Purchased: April 2019
Price: total in USD, $46.44 (CAD$60 + CAD$12)

Disk only Xbench results (regular boot, running GyazMail and TFF in the background, network off)

The combo makes an interesting, but not offensive, chirp when hitting the first Random Uncached Read, and if pressing one’s ear to where the drive is, it’s possible to hear the read/write oscillations.

upload_2019-4-18_7-47-50.png

[doublepost=1555592135][/doublepost]
Machine: PowerBook G4 17" 1.67GHz DLSD (A1139/PowerBook5,9)
SSD: Dogfish 256GB NGFF m.2 2280 SSD (via IDE-to-m.2 adapter)
Purchased: April 2019
Price: total in USD, $46.44 (CAD$60 + CAD$12)

Disk only Xbench results (regular boot, running GyazMail and TFF in the background, network off)

The combo makes an interesting, but not offensive, chirp when hitting the first Random Uncached Read, and if pressing one’s ear to where the drive is, it’s possible to hear the read/write oscillations.

upload_2019-4-18_7-47-50.png

Added: the Xbench disk test portion of the whole test from before the HDD-to-SSD upgrade, from a Hitachi 7200rpm 100GB OEM HDD, was 36.10.
 
Machine: PowerBook G4 17" 1.67GHz DLSD (A1139/PowerBook5,9)
SSD: Dogfish 256GB NGFF m.2 2280 SSD (via IDE-to-m.2 adapter)
Purchased: April 2019
Price: total in USD, $46.44 (CAD$60 + CAD$12)

Disk only Xbench results (regular boot, running GyazMail and TFF in the background, network off)

The combo makes an interesting, but not offensive, chirp when hitting the first Random Uncached Read, and if pressing one’s ear to where the drive is, it’s possible to hear the read/write oscillations.

View attachment 832753
[doublepost=1555592135][/doublepost]

Added: the Xbench disk test portion of the whole test from before the HDD-to-SSD upgrade, from a Hitachi 7200rpm 100GB OEM HDD, was 36.10.
That's with an Kingston mSATA-SSD, I'd say m.2 is not really faster
 

Attachments

  • Bild 2.png
    Bild 2.png
    61.7 KB · Views: 303
That's with an Kingston mSATA-SSD, I'd say m.2 is not really faster

That isn’t the point.

Here is the point:

The present offerings, availability, and prices for m.2 NGFF SSDs, at least where I live, generally outnumber what’s presently available for mSATA SSDs. Were this not the case, I would have echoed exactly what I did a year ago when I bought an IDE-to-mSATA adapter and an mSATA SSD for my clamshell iBook.

We good?
 
~200 points appears to be the PBG4’s speed limit regardless of the underlying SSD tech.

I haven’t been on the market looking for any SSDs recently, so it’s great to see m.2 options performing as expected (and at a good price point) in the old hardware.

The upside of keeping up with the interfaces is forward compatibility of the component in newer hardware (or PCIe interfaces and USB caddies).
 
That isn’t the point.

Here is the point:

The present offerings, availability, and prices for m.2 NGFF SSDs, at least where I live, generally outnumber what’s presently available for mSATA SSDs. Were this not the case, I would have echoed exactly what I did a year ago when I bought an IDE-to-mSATA adapter and an mSATA SSD for my clamshell iBook.

We good?
Now I get it ;) just checked and you are right!! I must have missed a recent drop in cost per GB as the last time I checked mSATA still was the better option and I hesitated to switch to m.2
 
As I currently have a 1.67GHz 15" with a 128GB mSata in a cheap ebay adaptor, 1.67GHz 17" with a 256GB mSata in a Lindy adaptor and a 1.5GHz 12" with a 250GB IDE WD HDD I thought I'd do some comparisons to see how they all perform. I was mainly interested to see the difference between the eBay adaptor and the Lindy one. Both mSata drives were Samsung PM851.

The Lineup:
lh5iaxd.jpg


PB G4 17" (SLSD) 1.67GHz, 2GB DDR, 256GB Samsung PM851 in Lindy adaptor, High res screen swap, Leopard:
QXQ5oG2.png


PB G4 15" (SLSD) 1.67GHz, 2GB DDR, 128GB Samsung PM851 in cheap £5 ebay adaptor, Tiger:
nffCc50.png


And as a comparison with one of the faster traditional HDDs available
PB G4 12" 1.5GHz, 1.25GB DDR, 250GB WD HDD:
xoHSvx9.png


As you can see the cheap eBay adaptors get more or less the same performance, I originally had issues getting it working but the issue was simply that by default they run as Master which G4 Macs don't seem to like, adding a jumper pin to make it the Cable Select configuration made it work. It's definitely a good way to save some money with an mSata upgrade. I used the kind with the white plastic cover.
 
As you can see the cheap eBay adaptors get more or less the same performance, I originally had issues getting it working but the issue was simply that by default they run as Master which G4 Macs don't seem to like, adding a jumper pin to make it the Cable Select configuration made it work.


Where are you placing that jumper pin? Thanks.
 
Where are you placing that jumper pin? Thanks.

Off the top of my head (as its now all reassembled) it was the top two pins. I googled 2.5 IDE jumper pins and followed the first layout I saw despite there being a few different ones, I guess I got lucky.
 
Machine: Pismo
IDE to dual CF adapter
CF to dual uSD adapter
128GB Samsung Pro Endurance uSD
 

Attachments

  • Picture 1.png
    Picture 1.png
    142.3 KB · Views: 275
  • Like
Reactions: AphoticD
relatively recent 12" Powerbook G4 867Mhz ebay score. The innolite msata gets solid scores except for that first random uncached write sequence. Tanks the score super fierce. Must be the cheap mSata I scored off ebay.

Oh well no worries :)

867Mhz PBG4 12.jpg
 
Last edited:
I recently bought an adapter for using microSD cards in place of a CF card. I bought this mainly due to the fact that large capacity microSD cards are much cheaper than CF cards of the same size, but I also wanted to see how the speed of this adapter compares to a standard ATA hard disk and a single standard CF card. This was especially interesting because the adapter boasts its ability to use two microSD cards in RAID 0. So here are the results, all on a fresh install of Tiger on a 300MHz Power Mac G3.

First is a 20GB Western Digital hard disk drive. I also timed its boot time at 1:15.81
ATA Disk.png

Next was a standard, and very well used, 4GB Kingston CF card. Boot time was 1:27.67
Kingston CF Card.png

After this I used a single microSD card in the dual microSD adapter. Boot time was 1:00.42.
MicroSD 1.png

And finally I used the microSD adapter with two microSD cards in RAID 0. Boot time was 58:06.
MicroSD 2.png

Overall I am pretty happy with the microSD to CF adapter. The total cost of getting two 32GB microSD cards, a CF to IDE adapter, and the aforementioned adapter itself was only about $40 AUD.
 
I recently bought an adapter for using microSD cards in place of a CF card. I bought this mainly due to the fact that large capacity microSD cards are much cheaper than CF cards of the same size, but I also wanted to see how the speed of this adapter compares to a standard ATA hard disk and a single standard CF card. This was especially interesting because the adapter boasts its ability to use two microSD cards in RAID 0. So here are the results, all on a fresh install of Tiger on a 300MHz Power Mac G3.

First is a 20GB Western Digital hard disk drive. I also timed its boot time at 1:15.81
View attachment 922965

Next was a standard, and very well used, 4GB Kingston CF card. Boot time was 1:27.67
View attachment 922966

After this I used a single microSD card in the dual microSD adapter. Boot time was 1:00.42.
View attachment 922967

And finally I used the microSD adapter with two microSD cards in RAID 0. Boot time was 58:06.
View attachment 922968

Overall I am pretty happy with the microSD to CF adapter. The total cost of getting two 32GB microSD cards, a CF to IDE adapter, and the aforementioned adapter itself was only about $40 AUD.

Thanks for sharing your results @Dharumanyo. I recently bought a single Micro-SD to CF adapter and a CF to 3.5" IDE adapter for my Sawtooth G4 with similar results. I think it is a good (cheap) solution for older Mac desktops, but I was unable to get the 2.5" CF -> IDE adapters to work for my PowerBooks.
 
I think it is a good (cheap) solution for older Mac desktops, but I was unable to get the 2.5" CF -> IDE adapters to work for my PowerBooks.
I've been using a couple of them for a while. I will have to benchmark them later on. I find the common cheap CF to laptop IDE drives are hit and miss. I have one that works consistently in my PowerBook 1400, but I also have multiple ones that simply do not work with any laptops despite nothing being obviously wrong with them. I have a more expensive CF adapter in my PowerBook G4 which I have had better results with.

Great comparision. What spec/class are the microSD cards?
Sandisk Ultra. Chosen simply because they were cheap. Though I don't imagine a better microSD would improve things significantly, since it would probably be bottlenecked by the CF interface.

They show RAID 0 isn't worth the increased risk in that case.
Agreed. It would be good if this adapter had the option of using two SD cards in a master/slave configuration.
 
~200 points appears to be the PBG4’s speed limit regardless of the underlying SSD tech.

With this test I'm seeing ~300 in my powerbook for whatever reason. I've tried 3 different SSDs with the cheapo mSATA to IDE converter and I get similar results.

My personal test is to time how long it takes to duplicate a 30GB movie folder. I was trying to see if there's a difference between the Quicksilver optical drive bus, the HDD bus, and a PCI card. I also tried software RAID setups with two drives on the same cable vs two drives on two cables.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.