![]() ![]() If you really want the link to the article/video, let me know and I can dig it up for you. There are Thunderbolt RAID solutions or even NVMe solutions but they will cost you almost as much as a new iMac. ![]() Both drives will likely use an internal SATA connection anyway so the extra bandwidth Thunderbolt offers (20 or 40 gbit/s) will make no difference whatsoever SATA is the limiting factor here. The main reason I got this over a Thunderbolt drive is cost, I paid 190 euros for the 512GB (with a free copy of Assassin's Creed Origins for PC, at a 59 euro value), a similar size Thunderbolt (2) drive will easily set you back twice that. It does use USB 3.1 Gen-2 connectivity, over USB-C, so that is a 10gbit/s bandwidth. Hence the necessity of installing Windows in a Windows2Go configuration. I first tested it on a 32gb USB3 pen drive, and when I found it working fine, got the Samsung T5 and repeated the process pretty by memory.Īs for the T5, it is a pure USB drive, not a Thunderbolt drive, therefore it is not recognised by the iMac as an internal drive. It uses a free tool to create a a bootable Windows on a USB. Not sure if I can link it here, but if you Google "Bootcamp on external SSD" you will find a very nice 9to5mac article with a very straightforward video. It does indeed need a little workaround (using a trick to use the Microsoft Developed Windows2Go functionality). ![]()
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