Macworld (USA)

FLEDGING SHELL THUNDERBOL­T 3: ROLL YOUR OWN X5 WITH THIS FAST, PORTABLE NVME ENCLOSURE

- BY JON L. JACOBI

There’s nothing like generic when it comes to saving money, be it prescripti­on medicines or the Shell Thunderbol­t 3.

The Shell, a svelte $165 unpopulate­d (no drive) enclosure from Fledging offers about the same performanc­e as Samsung’s X5 ( go.macworld.com/smx5), but for quite a bit less, depending on which M.2 NVME SSD you install in it.

DESIGN AND FEATURES

The Shell Thunderbol­t is considerab­ly smaller than the Samsung X5: 3.75 inches long, by 1.85 inches wide, by a mere 0.4 inches thick. It’s rendered in solid metal which is better for shedding heat, a good thing. At least until you pick the Shell up after heavy use. It can run startlingl­y hot under heavy load.

Fledging’s Shell USB 3.1 ( go.macworld. com/shll) sports a fan that keeps it very cool. Why the company didn’t provide one for the higher-voltage Shell Thunderbol­t, I can’t say. Perhaps it’s about form and aesthetics. Or maybe it was the only design available. I’d rather have a drive that’s a bit larger that can stay cool.

Bear in mind that the excessive heat I experience­d occurred after about 20 minutes of constant testing. Normal, light use leaves the drive only warm to the touch.

Fledging supplies a screwdrive­r to remove the four screws securing the top of the case. Inside you’ll find a single 2280 M.2 slot and a small screw to secure your NVME SSD in the slot. There’s a Type-c port for connecting the Shell to your recent vintage Mac; however, there’s no AC jack or adapter. That means you can’t use the bus-powered Shell with older Thunderbol­t 1 or 2 Macs using the Apple adapter, which doesn’t pass through device power.

PERFORMANC­E

The Fledging Shell Thunderbol­t 3’s performanc­e can vary wildly depending on the NVME SSD you populate it with, but testing proved that the enclosure itself is not a bottleneck. I tested the Shell with a Samsung 970 EVO and the results were very similar to the Samsung X5—the one exception being the 48GB copy test. I had on hand only a 500GB 970 EVO, while the X5 was 1TB. The 500GB model runs out of secondary cache and dips in performanc­e much earlier.

Otherwise, the Shell performed almost identicall­y to the X5. Note that the benchmarks, other than Blackmagic’s Disk Speed, were run under Windows with Core i7-5820. The Akitio Node Lite ( go.macworld. com/aknl) is a full-sized Thunderbol­t 3 enclosure designed for PCIE cards which in this case housed an Intel Optane 905P.

The Disk Speed test is indicative of the speed you’ll get during normal operations with the Fledging Shell Thunderbol­t 3 with a 970 EVO on board.

The following tests were run on IDG’S storage testbed under Windows 10. Note that the Fledging/970 EVO combo was

fastest in several tests, including Crystaldis­kmark 6, shown below.

As you can see below, you get those highly desirable, super quick NVME seek times, though for some reason, most likely a testing aberration, the 970 EVO was a tad slow with the reads. Another Shell test with the WD Black SN750 showed a 0.031 millisecon­d seek—twice as quick and par for the course.

As I explained, the 48GB copy tests shown below weren’t completely fair, as the 970

EVO I employed in the Shell was only 500GB, while the X5’s was 1TB. The EVO slows to below 1Gbps when it runs out of secondary cache, which is provided in proportion to capacity, so the X5 ran out later and turned in a quicker time. Same with the Intel 905P in the Akitio Node Lite.

As to that heat, the Shell has an advantage over the X5 in that it can shed it faster through its allmetal shell and will likely throttle

(reduce speed to avoid overheatin­g) later. That means external cooling (blowing air on it) will be more effective, but also means, as I said earlier, that the Shell can be hot to the touch. Not burn-you hot, but close enough to cause a self-preservati­on (i.e., hot potato) reaction.

BOTTOM LINE

The Shell Thunderbol­t is marvelous for light use. It’s as fast as the Samsung X5 and saves you money—about $100 with a similar capacity and quality drive. And while $165 may seem like a lot for a tiny enclosure with a bridge board, all the similar devices I found on Amazon were even more expensive. Hey, it’s not as expensive as an Apple Pro Display stand!

For heavy duty use such as video editing or running your OS, I’d skip the Shell and the X5 because of the thermal issues. If portabilit­y is not a concern, opt for an external enclosure such as the Node Lite or the Highpoint R6661A ( go.macworld.com/r61a). These will keep the drive cool, eliminate thermal throttling, as well as work with older Macs via Apple’s adapter. ■

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Fledging Shell Thunderbol­t 3 provides just about the same performanc­e as Samsung’s X5 for a lot less money.
The Fledging Shell Thunderbol­t 3 provides just about the same performanc­e as Samsung’s X5 for a lot less money.
 ??  ?? The Fledging Shell with a 970 EVO inside showed lots of throughput potential under Crystaldis­kmark 6.
The Fledging Shell with a 970 EVO inside showed lots of throughput potential under Crystaldis­kmark 6.
 ??  ?? We’re not sure why the slightly slow read seek result. Most likely it was simply normal testing deviation.
We’re not sure why the slightly slow read seek result. Most likely it was simply normal testing deviation.
 ??  ?? The 512GB 970 EVO inside the Shell ran out of cache sooner than the 1TB drive inside the Samsung X5
The 512GB 970 EVO inside the Shell ran out of cache sooner than the 1TB drive inside the Samsung X5

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