ID | | Article Title | Post Date |
661 |
| I'm using OWC Mercury Extreme Pro 6G SSDs with a Tempo SSD or Tempo SSD Pro adapter in a Thunderbolt Expansion Chassis and the system hangs after waking from sleep. | Oct-01-16 |
731 |
| How fast will an SSD be in an Echo Express Thunderbolt chassis using the Tempo SSD, SSD Pro or SSD Pro Plus? | Dec-30-17 |
735 |
| My Tempo SSD, Tempo SSD Pro or Tempo SATA Pro 6Gb 4-Port card prevents my HP Z820 from booting. | Dec-30-17 |
| You need to update the BIOS to Version 2.55 Rev A or newer available here: http://h20565.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=5228610&lang=en&cc=us |
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758 |
| Can I install Mac OS directly onto SSDs (or an SSD RAID) on the card? Will I get a recovery partition? | Dec-30-17 |
777 |
| Does the Tempo SSD, Tempo SSD Pro, or Tempo SSD Pro Plus support 15mm 2.5" drives? | Dec-30-17 |
964 |
| Does the Tempo SSD, Tempo SSD Pro, or Tempo SSD Pro Plus work in a Magma Thunderbolt 1 Chassis | Dec-30-17 |
976 |
| In a Mac Pro, the SSDs are seen as external drives, how do I prevent accidental ejects? | Feb-14-23 |
987 |
| Can I install a Boot Camp partition on my Tempo SSD in my Mac Pro? | Jan-12-18 |
| Apple supports Boot Camp only on internal drives. See Apple's support page, Set up a Windows Partition on Your Mac, which states "The drive you're partitioning must be an internal drive." The Tempo SSD appears to the Mac Pro as an external drive, because it uses a controller connected to the PCIe bus, and not to a controller on the motherboard. Sonnet can't support a configuration that Apple doesn't support. If you want to use Boot Camp from an SSD, you need to make it an internal drive. Plug the SSD into a Sonnet Transposer, screw it into one of your Mac Pro trays, thereby making it an internal drive.
9TO5Mac has published a proceedure to install Boot Camp on an external drive, but Sonnet does not support this.
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992 |
| The write speed of my Samsung 830, 840, 840 EVO, 840 PRO, 850 EVO or 850 PRO has slowed to below 100MB/s. | Mar-30-20 |
1011 |
| How do I use Sonnet's SATA cards in VMWare/vSphere 5.5+? | Mar-27-18 |
1012 |
| Do Sonnet SATA cards support NexStar Dual Bay Drive Docks and Icy Box IB-3640SU3 with SATA interface? | Oct-04-19 |
1064 |
| In a Mac Pro, can I install Windows on a Tempo SSD or SSD Pro Plus? | Jul-15-19 |
1073 |
| How do I configure RAID under macOS? | Feb-14-23 |
| Create a disk set using Disk Utility on macOS
1. You can create a Redundant Array of Independent SSDs (RAID) set to optimize storage performance, or increase reliability in case of a SSD failure. You can also create a set that concatenates smaller SSDs to act as one larger SSD.
2. In the Disk Utility app on your Mac, choose File Menu -> RAID Assistant.
3. Select a Set type:
Striped (RAID 0) Set: A striped RAID set can speed up access to your data. You can't create a RAID set on a startup SSD; you must start up your computer from a single SSD.
Mirrored (RAID 1) Set: Protect your data against hardware failure with a mirrored RAID set. When you create a mirrored RAID set, your data is written to multiple SSDs so the information is stored redundantly. You can't create a RAID set on a startup SSD; you must start up your computer from a single SSD.
Concatenated Set: Increase storage space with a concatenated SSD set. If you need one large SSD, but you have several smaller SSDs, you can create a concatenated SSD set to use as one large SSD.
4. Select the checkboxes of the SSDs you want to include in the set.
5. For each SSD, click the pop-up menu in the Role column and choose "RAID slice" or "Spare" to designate the disk as a standard member or spare in the set, then click Next.
6. Enter a name for the RAID set in the RAID Name field.
7. Click the Format pop-up menu, then choose a volume format that you want for all the disks in the set. (See File system formats available in Disk Utility.)
8. Click the "Chunk size" pop-up menu, then choose a disk chunk size that you want used for all the disks.
When you create a striped set, chunks of data from the same file are distributed across the SSDs. Ideally, you want data distributed across SSDs evenly and at an optimum size so that it can be efficiently accessed. If you want high data throughput from your set, choose a smaller chunk size so that data is spread across the drives and one drive can be accessing data while another is seeking the next chunk. With mirrored disk sets, choose a chunk size that matches the data you are accessing. For example, when working with video files, your Mac is accessing large chunks of data, whereas when using a database of many small records, your disks may be accessing smaller chunks of information.
9. If you are creating a mirrored RAID set, select the "Automatically rebuild" checkbox to allow the set to be automatically rebuilt when member disks are reconnected.
10. Click Create.
11. Click Done. |
  |
1095 |
| I'm using this card with macOS 10.15 and am experiencing Kernel Panics | Mar-15-20 |
1126 |
| Option-boot doesn't function in Mac Pro 5,1 when a bootable Mac OS is installed on a Tempo SSD | Jan-02-21 |
| There were two versions of Tempo SSD.
The original version used the Marvell 88SE9182 SATA controller.
The current version uses an ASMedia ASM1062 SATA controller.
With the discontinued Marvell controller, if a bootable volume is created on a Tempo SSD, option-boot works fine in the Mac Pro 3,1, 4,1, and 7,1 (2019), but not in the Mac Pro 5,1. The recommended workaround in a Mac Pro 5,1 is to select the boot volume in the Startup Disk System Preferences and restart. If the Tempo SSD has only data volume(s) (not bootable volumes), then option
With the current ASMedia controller, option-boot works fine in the Mac Pro 5,1. |
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1136 |
| How can I use my new SSD volume to hold my user folder on macOS? | Feb-14-23 |
1183 |
| The Write performance of my SSD is very slow under Windows. | Feb-14-23 |
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