It’s an aluminum box with a few clips and screws plus 2 cables. $400? Why?
Wonder how long before a 3rd party kit comes out for $99?
Wonder how long before a 3rd party kit comes out for $99?
It’s an aluminum box with a few clips and screws plus 2 cables. $400? Why?
Wonder how long before a 3rd party kit comes out for $99?
Because it includes 2x 4 TB drives.
Apple reserved the space and the ports to mount this exact third-party HDD cage, how convenient.Don't forget it's also rugged and elegant and easy to set up.
Can you put a Superdrive in it? Because I'm sure most people still want a Superdrive.Apple reserved the space and the ports to mount this exact third-party HDD cage, how convenient.
Why doesn't Apple sell it as an official add-on, or just include it in the case?
Apple reserved the space and the ports to mount this exact third-party HDD cage, how convenient.
Why doesn't Apple sell it as an official add-on, or just include it in the case?
Apple reserved the space and the ports to mount this exact third-party HDD cage, how convenient.
Why doesn't Apple sell it as an official add-on, or just include it in the case?
Can you put a Superdrive in it? Because I'm sure most people still want a Superdrive.
I'd assume that Apple's engineers know what they are doing. Spinners are fine at up to 60°C - and the CPU exhaust will be far less than that.The design of the Mac Pro does not suggest that this was a designed for space . It is downstream of the CPU thermal exhaust where the weren’t keen to put anything strategic there anyway .
Sorry, the Superdrive comment was a joke about old technology (like spinners).No. It is an internal only drive cage. it is not a sneaker net drive solution. ( go to post #3 above and look. There is an picture of one installed . )
Promise is using the HDD to drive the price much higher price point. An "enterprise" NAS 8TB drive is going to run around $250-350 . Subtract that (especially at the upper end of that range ) from the $399 here and get a decent price for a bracket.
That's an assumption. When we ordered Dells and Lenovo workstations, they shipped low-end "Green" drives. And the Lenovo upgrade kit, which included the other drive sleds and 4-slot backplane (which also supports U.2), is $48, direct.
I'd assume that Apple's engineers know what they are doing. Spinners are fine at up to 60°C - and the CPU exhaust will be far less than that.
Any idea of whether we can add a 2.5 SSD to the spare slot of the Pegasus J2i? And if so do we get SATAIII 6G Speeds?
The bulk storage on this sucker is PCIe cards that hold NVMe drives...
The REALLY bulk storage is many-bay Thunderbolt 3 and NAS options...
This is a super-high end workstation - the need to stick a couple of spinners in it was not a primary design consideration.