crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0
crwdns2918538:0crwdne2918538:0

crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Dan

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

To start with your systems Fusion Drive is made up of two drives physically! A standard SATA HDD and a small sized PCIe/NVMe blade SSD which is setup as a cache drive to the HDD.
-So you have all of the needed connections, the only issue is what you want for performance. Replacing the small blade SSD with a larger drive is the best direction, then setting it up as your boot drive installing the macOS onto it. Then leave your HDD as your data drive. Thats what I would do. following this guide [guide|32646] and using the [product|IF123-133-3] either the 480 GB or the 1TB drives.
+So you have all of the needed connections, the only issue is what you want for performance. Replacing the small blade SSD with a larger drive is the best direction, then setting it up as your boot drive installing the macOS onto it. Then leave your HDD as your data drive. Thats what I would do following this guide [guide|32646] and using the [product|IF123-133-3] either the 480 GB or the 1TB drives.
Its also the easiest upgrade possible! Less than 15mins done!
The needed tools are listed in the guide.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Dan

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Two start with your systems Fusion Drive is made up of two drives physically! A standard SATA HDD and a small sized PCIe/NVMe blade SSD which is setup as a cache drive to the HDD.
+To start with your systems Fusion Drive is made up of two drives physically! A standard SATA HDD and a small sized PCIe/NVMe blade SSD which is setup as a cache drive to the HDD.
So you have all of the needed connections, the only issue is what you want for performance. Replacing the small blade SSD with a larger drive is the best direction, then setting it up as your boot drive installing the macOS onto it. Then leave your HDD as your data drive. Thats what I would do. following this guide [guide|32646] and using the [product|IF123-133-3] either the 480 GB or the 1TB drives.
Its also the easiest upgrade possible! Less than 15mins done!
The needed tools are listed in the guide.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Dan

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Two start with your systems Fusion Drive is made up of two drives physically! A standard SATA HDD and a small sized PCIe/NVMe blade SSD which is setup as a cache drive to the HDD.

So you have all of the needed connections, the only issue is what you want for performance. Replacing the small blade SSD with a larger drive is the best direction, then setting it up as your boot drive installing the macOS onto it. Then leave your HDD as your data drive. Thats what I would do. following this guide [guide|32646] and using the [product|IF123-133-3] either the 480 GB or the 1TB drives.

Its also the easiest upgrade possible! Less than 15mins done!

The needed tools are listed in the guide.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open