Samsung T5 USB-C Solid State Drive 1TB is likely the best storage per dollar. I bought one to back up a 2018 Ipad Pro 12.9 1TB once iOS 13 arrives. Beta users have already tested it. See youtube for more deets.What the best device to add to iPad Pro for adding storage to edit movies and videos without taking up storage on devise?
as well as TB3 enabled SSDs
Really? They are pricey so I don’t bother getting one of such but that is interesting. Does Apple not provide thunderbolt support on iPad Pro 2018? Maybe they will support that next year, or 2019 iPad.TB3 ssds generally don't function over regular USB C ports.
TB3 ssds generally don't function over regular USB C ports.
The iPad Pro USB-C connector supports thunderbolt.
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT207443
However directly connecting a thunderbolt SSD may not work if the SSD doesn't get sufficient power from the iPad. In that case a dock might work.
Oh, that's a good thing! Adding external storage will be much easier to do then.I have the new 11in 65gb iPad Pro 2019
Personally I went with Sandisk Extreme SSD. It’s even more portable than the Samsung and has better protection IMO. It works with any ipad on Ipad OS.
I take the opportunity to give some more info about storage via USB..
1. Concerning TB3 it’s an Intel proprietary technology (Intel licences it) that works over USB C but is not compatible with USB 3.0/1.
However, USB 4.0 will incorporate TB3 for free, as Intel has given the technolgoiy to the USB Group.
So in the future, we’ll have the equivalent of TB3 on ipads, which will fall back to USB 3.1 for older devices like current ipads.
2. Also a note about power. I have done many tests lately and here is the result:
Ipad pro 2018 can power any drive, including mechanical ones with it’s 7.5 watts.
With lightning it’s more complex.
- USB thumb drives: most will not work without plugging external power into the camera connection kit 3.0, saying it requires too much power. This is not true. It’s a matter of some special protocol. I have a small USB 2.0 hub that complies with this protocol so I can plug in most USB thumb drives and they will work without additional cables plugged in (with either the CCK 2.0 or 3.0). The only exception are some ultrafast thumb drives that use an SSD controller like the Corsair GTX. Those fall in the next category.
- Portable SSDs (like those from Samsung and Sandisk): they will work with any ipad that has Ipad OS provided that you use the USB 3.0 CCK and plug in power.
- HDD or some SSD in USB enclosures (so the kind of portable SSD you can make yourself out of some internal SSDs): those will only work with USB 3.0 ipads (so 12.9 first gen, and any of second gen, but not the 9.7 pro, mini or air 3 etc.), again provided that you plug in power.
yeah I was hesitant to make a separate thread, I'll probably do itgreat comment
you should slightly expand it and make it a separate thread: “instructions for iOS external drives”
Personally I went with Sandisk Extreme SSD. It’s even more portable than the Samsung and has better protection IMO. It works with any ipad on Ipad OS.
I take the opportunity to give some more info about storage via USB..
1. Concerning TB3 it’s an Intel proprietary technology (Intel licences it) that works over USB C but is not compatible with USB 3.0/1.
However, USB 4.0 will incorporate TB3 for free, as Intel has given the technolgoiy to the USB Group.
So in the future, we’ll have the equivalent of TB3 on ipads, which will fall back to USB 3.1 for older devices like current ipads.
2. Also a note about power. I have done many tests lately and here is the result:
Ipad pro 2018 can power any drive, including mechanical ones with it’s 7.5 watts.
With lightning it’s more complex.
- USB thumb drives: most will not work without plugging external power into the camera connection kit 3.0, saying it requires too much power. This is not true. It’s a matter of some special protocol. I have a small USB 2.0 hub that complies with this protocol so I can plug in most USB thumb drives and they will work without additional cables plugged in (with either the CCK 2.0 or 3.0). The only exception are some ultrafast thumb drives that use an SSD controller like the Corsair GTX. Those fall in the next category.
- Portable SSDs (like those from Samsung and Sandisk): they will work with any ipad that has Ipad OS provided that you use the USB 3.0 CCK and plug in power.
- HDD or some SSD in USB enclosures (so the kind of portable SSD you can make yourself out of some internal SSDs): those will only work with USB 3.0 ipads (so 12.9 first gen, and any of second gen, but not the 9.7 pro, mini or air 3 etc.), again provided that you plug in power.
Personally I went with Sandisk Extreme SSD. It’s even more portable than the Samsung and has better protection IMO. It works with any ipad on Ipad OS.
I take the opportunity to give some more info about storage via USB..
1. Concerning TB3 it’s an Intel proprietary technology (Intel licences it) that works over USB C but is not compatible with USB 3.0/1.
However, USB 4.0 will incorporate TB3 for free, as Intel has given the technolgoiy to the USB Group.
So in the future, we’ll have the equivalent of TB3 on ipads, which will fall back to USB 3.1 for older devices like current ipads.
2. Also a note about power. I have done many tests lately and here is the result:
Ipad pro 2018 can power any drive, including mechanical ones with it’s 7.5 watts.
With lightning it’s more complex.
- USB thumb drives: most will not work without plugging external power into the camera connection kit 3.0, saying it requires too much power. This is not true. It’s a matter of some special protocol. I have a small USB 2.0 hub that complies with this protocol so I can plug in most USB thumb drives and they will work without additional cables plugged in (with either the CCK 2.0 or 3.0). The only exception are some ultrafast thumb drives that use an SSD controller like the Corsair GTX. Those fall in the next category.
- Portable SSDs (like those from Samsung and Sandisk): they will work with any ipad that has Ipad OS provided that you use the USB 3.0 CCK and plug in power.
- HDD or some SSD in USB enclosures (so the kind of portable SSD you can make yourself out of some internal SSDs): those will only work with USB 3.0 ipads (so 12.9 first gen, and any of second gen, but not the 9.7 pro, mini or air 3 etc.), again provided that you plug in power.
thanks for the tip. I will try it this evening and let you know the verdict. Fingers crossed!Yes, the SanDisk SSD will work if you use the CCK plugged into power. Your issue is probably due to the fact that the drive was not ejected properly... Contrary to what people say and believe, ipads do not eject drives properly and no, it's not that they don't need to, they just don't have an way to do it...
So plug your drive into a pc (preferably windows, I have not tested this with mac), it should ask you to repair the drive. Do it and then eject it properly from the"safely remove.." option. Then plug the CCK into the ipad and into power, and only then plug your Sandisk. Let me know if it worked.
As I said in another thread, those have been around for years but don't work with the Files app, they only work with their own app...I saw thumb drives with USB-A and Lightning ports (one on each side) at Best Buy last week.
As I said in another thread, those have been around for years but don't work with the Files app, they only work with their own app...
Personally I went with Sandisk Extreme SSD. It’s even more portable than the Samsung and has better protection IMO. It works with any ipad on Ipad OS.
I take the opportunity to give some more info about storage via USB..
1. Concerning TB3 it’s an Intel proprietary technology (Intel licences it) that works over USB C but is not compatible with USB 3.0/1.
However, USB 4.0 will incorporate TB3 for free, as Intel has given the technolgoiy to the USB Group.
So in the future, we’ll have the equivalent of TB3 on ipads, which will fall back to USB 3.1 for older devices like current ipads.
2. Also a note about power. I have done many tests lately and here is the result:
Ipad pro 2018 can power any drive, including mechanical ones with it’s 7.5 watts.
With lightning it’s more complex.
- USB thumb drives: most will not work without plugging external power into the camera connection kit 3.0, saying it requires too much power. This is not true. It’s a matter of some special protocol. I have a small USB 2.0 hub that complies with this protocol so I can plug in most USB thumb drives and they will work without additional cables plugged in (with either the CCK 2.0 or 3.0). The only exception are some ultrafast thumb drives that use an SSD controller like the Corsair GTX. Those fall in the next category.
- Portable SSDs (like those from Samsung and Sandisk): they will work with any ipad that has Ipad OS provided that you use the USB 3.0 CCK and plug in power.
- HDD or some SSD in USB enclosures (so the kind of portable SSD you can make yourself out of some internal SSDs): those will only work with USB 3.0 ipads (so 12.9 first gen, and any of second gen, but not the 9.7 pro, mini or air 3 etc.), again provided that you plug in power.
Have you tried the SanDisk extreme ssd with a lightening iPad and can confirm it should work? I just picked one up to use with my iPad Air along with the camera connection adapter with power plugged in and the iPad has no clue a drive is attached. It will recognize a usb. My ssd is formatted to exFAT so I think
thanks for the tip. I will try it this evening and let you know the verdict. Fingers crossed!
Still not working. Plugged the ssd into my pc. Did not get asked to repair the drive so I went into properties and clicked check disk. Windows didn’t find anything wrong. I reformatted the drive in case. Ejected the drive safely. Plugged in the CCK then the power then the ssd. iPad does nothing. No error messages and no ssd in the files app. Any other thoughts?Have you tried the SanDisk extreme ssd with a lightening iPad and can confirm it should work? I just picked one up to use with my iPad Air along with the camera connection adapter with power plugged in and the iPad has no clue a drive is attached. It will recognize a usb. My ssd is formatted to exFAT so I think
thanks for the tip. I will try it this evening and let you know the verdict. Fingers crossed!
Have you tried the SanDisk extreme ssd with a lightening iPad and can confirm it should work? I just picked one up to use with my iPad Air along with the camera connection adapter with power plugged in
Still not working. Plugged the ssd into my pc. Did not get asked to repair the drive so I went into properties and clicked check disk. Windows didn’t find anything wrong. I reformatted the drive in case. Ejected the drive safely. Plugged in the CCK then the power then the ssd. iPad does nothing. No error messages and no ssd in the files app. Any other thoughts?
Don’t know what the deal is then. The new iPad Air is essentially the gen 2 iPP.My Extreme SSD drives work fine on my gen 2 iPP 12.9 using the USB 3.0 camera adapter as long as I apply power to the lightning port on the adapter. I get no power prompt if i do not power the adapter like I typically do with other drives.
Yes it is exFAT.Just to double-check, if you right-click on the SSD in Windows Explorer when it's connected to the PC, does it say "File System: exFAT"?
Don’t know what the deal is then. The new iPad Air is essentially the gen 2 iPP.
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Yes it is exFAT.