Mac Format

Upgrade your Mac

Add a fast boot drive to give your Mac a whole new lease of life

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Once upon a time, upgrading your Mac’s memory or hard drive was a relatively easy way to extend its usable lifespan by months, if not years. However, in recent years, newer models have become increasing­ly more difficult to upgrade, to the point where memory and internal drives are no longer userreplac­eable. But don’t worry – if your Mac runs on a painfully slow hard drive or Fusion Drive, the good news is you can enjoy the benefits of a much-improved performanc­e by switching to an external solid-state drive (SSD). Yes, thanks to the fast (5Gbps or better) transfer speeds found on USB 3.0 and Thunderbol­t ports, your new external SSD will noticeably outpace your sluggish internal drive. Below you’ll find a list of five of our recommende­d SSD drives to suit every budget and interface.

Go to  > About This Mac > System Report and select ‘Thunderbol­t/USB 4’ and ‘USB’ sections to see what speeds you can expect – older USB-A ports typically max out at 5Gbps, which translates to around 500MB/s, close to the top speeds of older SATA-based SSDs.

Meanwhile, newer NVMe/vNAND-based SSDs can reach 1,000MB/s through USB 3.1 Gen 2 ports, while Thunderbol­t/USB 4 supports the fastest drives on the market, such as the Envoy Pro SX (see box below).

Run macOS externally

The step-by-step guide opposite reveals how to install macOS to your external drive. If you run into problems using Disk Utility, you’ll need to dip into the Terminal and the diskutil command (see https://ss64.com/osx/diskutil.html for a detailed guide). If your drive isn’t already formatted in the APFS format, then try the following: diskutil list

Make a note of your drive’s identifier, using its size to help pinpoint it, then issue the following command,

substituti­ng ‘diskname’ with your chosen drive label (such as SamsungT7), and ‘disk4’ with your identifier: diskutil eraseDisk APFS diskname disk4

Once your SSD is correctly formatted, you can go on to install macOS on it, following the first step-by-step guide. You’ll end up booting into a brand-new copy of macOS – after updating your new install, open Applicatio­ns > Utilities to run Migration Assistant to transfer your apps, data and other settings from your old drive to your new one.

Once complete, you can format your old drive and use it as a dedicated storage device. The second step-by-step guide opposite reveals how to transfer your media files back to free up space on your new drive.

 ?? ?? Boot from your external SSD. It’s easy to do – open Migration Assistant and select your old hard drive to transfer your data, settings and apps across.
Boot from your external SSD. It’s easy to do – open Migration Assistant and select your old hard drive to transfer your data, settings and apps across.

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