Yeah, you can get a better quality and higher performing SSD to go inside of it. Among other things, that Adata drive and the Samsung drive (and many others like them) have 5 year warranties as well. If anything does go wrong with them, maybe don't mention that you were using it in an external enclosure if you have to do a warranty return. However, they should have very high reliability even in an external drive which sees heavy usage.
In India the pricing is a different story: External Samsung t7(500gb) - ₹5500 ~ $67 Sandisk (1tb) - ₹6500 ~ $80 Internal with enclosure: Western digital green SSD (500gb) + orico enclosure - ₹1800+₹500=₹2300 ~ $30 So it's cheaper to buy internal with enclosure.
The Sandisk is very easy to crack open. Slightly bending the case (company logo facing upwards and bending the other way) will cause the plastic cover pop-open. Inside only 1 screw holding the board and the SSD. Difficult part is they are taped together :). Once you pop, you can't stop and can upgrade it.
Just saw another video that people cracked open as you said but SanDisk glued the M.2 card to their USB C interface card and the guy could not separate them. I think if he applies more force it may/may not separate but also the chance of destroying the whole unit as well.
sandisk E61 I wanted to know if one can replace the M.2 NVSE SSD with a faster one. Will the newer M.2 SSD from some other brand work with this "Enclosure"?
I've seen the Orico enclosure on sale for about $24 USD. So if you aren't in a hurry. AN other advantage to the DIY is if you are upgrading an NVMe drive in another computer you can make an external drive out of the old one.
the enclosed SSD seems like it's also smaller/more portable. and you always have the option of putting it in your laptop later if you want. I'll have to do like you say, just check the prices in the local currency. For me, as long as it comes from a reputable brand, whichever is cheapest in China is good enough.
It might also be easier to re-sell that way as well. These external NVMe enclosures are going to continue to be very useful for many years, even if they're bottlenecking the speed of future NVMe SSDs. The m.2 form factor is just not as convenient as Sata 3 unfortunately, but with an m.2 NVMe SSD enclosure, it becomes a lot easier to be able to read or write to or from an NVMe SSD, mitigating the awkwardness of m.2 NVMe drives (especially the fact that most computers are only going to have one spot for them, which in many cases can be extremely difficult and time consuming to physically access (sometimes it's actually underneath the motherboard, such as with many ITX motherboards). You can also buy PCIe adapter cards for m.2 NVMe SSDs (and also for sata m.2 SSDs), but those are still probably a lot more awkward and time consuming to work with than an external NVMe enclosure. I would recommend buying a good quality NVMe enclosure which is built to last, because it's going to be useful for a long time to come, but hopefully which also has easy and tool-less installation.
I am just a big fan of building and crafting stuff, diy in general is always my first option, but I did notice that the pre-built external ssds are more cost effective
Thanks for the clear video. I am in the fence between the two options but one advantage of SanDisk is its built-in 256 bit AES hardware encryption which standard enclosure does not have. I may end up with SanDisk because of this encryption.
@@vamsikrishna1934 I didn't know it cannot work on Android. Thanks a lot for the info. Any fast encryption alternative that work for both Windows and Android that you know of?
@@cafephin2024 it works on android bro . Sorry just now today I tested this . This is amazing man in terms of security .unfortunately no youtuber told about it . You just need to install SanDisk memory zone app on Android . And it's security is damn strong .not like samsung SSD . My only problem is it is not giving enough speed in smartphone .only 30mbps I am getting in smartphone .don't know the reason .on my old hdd laptop also it is slow .
@@vamsikrishna1934 I think it's slow because we need USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 to get the theory 10G/s. The latest Google Pixel 6 pro only has USB-C 3.1 Gen 1 so we will have to wait for a while before mobile phone can reach faster speeds. My 2 years old is HP Elitebook x360 has only 1 high speed port.
There is another consideration now I have gone and built a DIY SSD. For whatever reason the enclosure I got doesn’t always auto mount in windows. You have to manually assign a drive letter via windows disk management the first you use it. Out of 4 computers I test I needed to do this for 3 of them. The 4th computer mounted and I tested transferring videos from a NAS. After a couple of minutes a time out error occurs and also it disconnects the diy ssd. When I tried to reconnect the laptop freezes. On the other hand a Samsung T7 worked flawlessly as a removable drive. So now I will only use this diy ssd for fast backup and transfers for my own computer and maybe other PCs I test.
You are paying premium for the NVMe interface both on the drive and enclosure even though the USB connection won't let you use most of the extra speed. DIY external SSDs become even cheaper if you use a SATA SSD and SATA enclosure of the same capacity. The effective speed won't be much different as it's still over USB, and you can choose between 2.5 inch and m.2 2280 form factors (both form factors have SATA drives and enclosures available and at present, are a similar price). If you do this, you can beat the price of pre-manufactured portable SSDs quite significantly. SATA USB3 enclosure are as little as $15 for reliable brands
Wonder how you dealt with the rather extreme heat the NVMe SSD generates inside the enclosure. I use the Ugreen enclosure with 500Gb of Samsung 970 EvoPlus. The heat is WAY burning (over 75C) I have to put a computer USB Fan on top of it and manages to cool it own to 37C max, all day long.
Thanks for watching! You're right about the heat. The DIY enclosure's heatsink gets quite hot during heavy operations, I haven't measured the temperature precisely, but it feels similar to when you hold a hot cup of coffee. So far I've used it for 6 months and haven't noticed any problems yet, but at least I know the heatsink is working and pulling heat from the SSD! I don't really touch the SSD enclosure when I'm working, so I haven't really been too bothered by the heat.
When it comes to - pre-built drives, I have a Samsung T5, has noticeably lower price per GB than T7. When it comes to DIY - I think Sata ones should have been mentioned. Right now the best idea for getting an affordable, external ssd would be buying a 2.5 drive enclosure(with type c connector and 3.0 interface at the least) and a Samsung QVO 2.5 inch Sata ssd. It gives you really high capacity for the money, super high reliability and really good read speeds if you're using a 3.0 usb port. Thanks for the video!
Yes you're right, the internal SSD can hit over 2000MB speeds! To match the internal speeds, you'd need a Thunderbolt drive, which my new video covers here: ua-cam.com/video/QYJWL3JL4rg/v-deo.html
Great review! This is amazing! I bought a Dell XPS 9510 and decided to use that for my vid and photo editing. For work, I’ll get my m.2 nvme from my pc and buy an enclosure with 3.2 so I can just plug and play. Still deciding on the Sandisk and Samsung eternals. Thanks for helping me make a decision! Sub’d and liked to Zen!
Thanks for this video. I'm actually looking at the ASUS ROG STRIX Arion Aluminum Alloy M.2 NVMe SSD External Portable Enclosure Case Adapter. Undecided as yet though..
Opening up your devices does not void your warranty. That would be a violation of the law if it did. The manufacturers may say that but they have the burden to show that you opening actually broke something for your warranty coverage to be legally denied. Those warranty void stickers are illegal.
Depending on where you live in. In the US, this doesn’t void your warranty. But in countries without this consumer protection, such as HK, this May void the warranty.
@@Overonator Thank you. Yes, I had issue in Hong Kong, where I purchased an Asus and upgraded my SSD & RAM. Warranty got voided. Consumer protection is weak here. I doubt this would happen in EU / US. So just a reminder for those to check their country’s consumer laws before doing what I’ve done.
Trying to find an external enclosure or reader for my Lenovo SSD, but trying to find the correct pin configuration is proving a challenge. It’s not M.2 but instead, it’s almost square
Nice test but it would be much better if you would also measure temperature under load, both internal from sensor and external with some infrared gun. I would be very interested if the Sandis casing give better heat spread than the enclosure.
Is the cable connection still good at ur enclosure? Some report that over time they have some connection problems... Another point for the purchase of an enclosure would be an update of your system... From 500gb to 2tb for example... So the extra m.2 SSD can still be used as an external drive... 🤗👍🏻 Greetings from Taiwan 🙋🏼♂️
Sometimes DIYing your own SSD may be better options, as some SSD enclosures have better options like supercapacitor power loss protection which very few PCIe SSD enclosures offer, such as DockCase SSD enclosure which is kinda a must have for PCIe SSDs that also have their own RAM memory chips, just so they can safely flush their RAM memory contents onto NAND flash chips. Nevertheless, store-bought USB SSDs are still okay for every day use. I just went with WD Black SN750 SSD, as I needed something reliable and efficient and I got 1 TB SN850X instead for my Ryzen Threadripper workstation, so I didn't want to waste the 500 GB SN750 SSD anyways, and yes I got the 10 second version of DockCase SSD enclosure also, which is massively better than the cheapo USB flash drives, especially cheaper when you have a PCIe SSD lying around for a while (Sabrent tool-less USB-C 3.2 PCIe SSD enclosure is like $30 a pop, generally).
I remember having a portable WD HDD, it was hardware encrypted, if the enclosure fails, your data is lost, no way of recovering it cause of the encryption. Something to think about, I don't know if other brands does the same.
Thanks! Yeah, there are quite a few places depending where you live. I get most of my parts in Sham Shui Po as that's closest to me. Mong Kok is just as well stocked too. As you mentioned, any of the computer centers/malls will have everything. I recommend this website to check for pricing: www.price.com.hk
@@ZenTechLife thanks for the tips! I live in HK a couple month out of the year. I’m very much looking forward to going back. Thanks for the video, I’m subscribed
Tanya om: 1. Setelah pemakaian 2 tahun gimana? Adakah penurunan speed karena jatah TBWnya terpakai banyak 2. Sekarang yg extreme kan sudah keluar versi speed 1050mbps, bedanya apa dgn yg extreme pro? Selain dr segi fisik (kalo yg extreme pro ini di sekelilingnya ada bezel orennya) Saya punya yg extreme 1TB/ speed 550mbps. Setelah pemakaian 1 tahun buat editing video wedding, speednya turun jadi 350mbps. Sekarang mau beli lg yg speed 1TB/1050mbps, tp bingung sama varian yg beredar di pasaran skrg. Sandisk selalu rancu ngasih varian produknya, SDcardnya jg gitu, ada varian speed yg sama antara Extreme & Extreme pro 😂
Hi, great video and compression. I want to buy new SSD. And thinking about DIY version because the speed and portability. But my concerns are: how about compatibility with other devices? How about security? And lastly how about software or the hardware that connect to laptop(Mac)? Are all 3 things will merge and work like any other SSD like commercials products? Thanks for any advice and opinions on it.
DIY enclosures are compatible with Windows and macOS devices. They function the same as commercial products. You don't need any additional software to use a DIY SSD with a computer, it will detect it like a normal drive/USB. I'm not sure what you mean by security?
@@ZenTechLife thanks for the answer. Ok that is great it works like any other drive. By the Security I mean. If it is secure to use. And if can be used like password protected like some other SSD. As sometimes they got they own software. I guess not as it is just DIY drive. Anyway thanks for quick answer and information 👍😉
Have you tested extended write speed? I have tried to transfer 400GB to the orico adata cobo and it slow to a crawl after about 100GB. I assume due to the heat which gets hot quickly. Wondering if that affects the pre-built as well.
Can’t say that I’ve tried extended write operations! But your assumption is probably correct about the heat causing the SSD to throttle itself. The prebuilt SanDisk featured in the video definitely runs cooler than the Orico, so my prediction is it should sustain high transfer speeds for a longer period too.
Thanks. But would for example the Acasis 10-in-1 SSD enclosure wuth SSD added even work on a MBook Air 13" that has only two USB-C ports and was built in 2020?
Great review. I was very much looking into doing the same, but I am quite discouraged by all the longevity issue people raise in comments on those DIY enclosure. Any comments? Also, given the USB 3 cap on transfer speed, wouldn't it be worth looking into non-NVMe solution for DIY enclosure? Surely more economical and less risky.
The SanDisk is definitely more robust and durable, but unless you throw your enclosure into a bag everyday, it should be fine. I've been using mine for 6 months, but I do put it into a tech pouch along with my cables and other miscellaneous items. And yes, with USB3.1 capping out at 10Gbps, a SATA SSD will definitely be more economical. However, SATA SSDs typically peak at around 550Mb/s, so if your workflow requires very fast transfer speeds, then this solution can provide noticeable gains. Hope that helps!
Please also show the temperature difference between orico usb 3.2 and sandisk portable ssd while moving files form laptop or vice - versa . Can I play valorant or GTA 5 like game with the orico usb 3.2 external storage , If yes, then for how much long hours we can play games so that ssd inside the orico usb 3.2 enclosure should be safe from extreme heating.
I can't tell you the exact temperatures, but I've done many long hours of editing from both the Orico and Sandisk external SSD and they were both safe from overheating. You can definitely play video games from an external drive with no worries of overheating. Games generally transfer loads of data during the loading screens only, so it'll be fine.
USB3.0 to Mac SSD Enclosure USB3.0 Aluminum Alloy SSD Enclosure for 2013/2014/2015 MacBook Air/Pro/Retina for Apple SSD Case Box is there a better SSD For 2015 MacBook Pro cheaper??
Should you use a thermal pad on a M.2 in an external enclosure? E.G.: ADATA swordfish M.2 (500GB - 2TB) come with the thermal pad included and on the M.2. You don't add it. With a Elite M.2 NVMe PCIe 2280 External Enclosure w/ 1x USB C 3.1 Gen2 M/M Cable and 1x USB Type C 3.1 to USB 3.0 A Cable?
It depends if your enclosure has a heatsink or if the housing acts like a heatsink. The ORICO has a heatsink that sits above the M.2 SSD so I do use a thermal pad to help heat dissipation.
Am i missing something - here in australia a sandisk extreme pro 1tb will cost you $400, the DIY 1tb Nvme costs $160. the enclosure costs $50. So the difference is massive. I have no idea why your DYI costs more??
What a chill video. Dude is like the Bob Ross of SSDs.
I like the SSD with enclosure because of the flexibility. You can also choose SSD brands with DRAM and you can later put it in a laptop or desktop.
Yeah, you can get a better quality and higher performing SSD to go inside of it. Among other things, that Adata drive and the Samsung drive (and many others like them) have 5 year warranties as well. If anything does go wrong with them, maybe don't mention that you were using it in an external enclosure if you have to do a warranty return. However, they should have very high reliability even in an external drive which sees heavy usage.
One of the most underrated channels on UA-cam. This content is GOLD!
Thanks for your support!
很不错的视频。我分享一下自己的使用体会:
1.Mac会比Windows快。我自己有一个DIY外置硬盘是SSK +WD SN500 500G, 测速都可以到900MB/s +,但是Windows上,在使用雷电接口的情况下实际传文件大概是500MB/s,而在我同学的MAC上可以跑800MB/s左右。据说是因为Windows的笔记本通常会把雷电控制器、SSD和USB之类的其他接口都挂载在DMI总线下,带宽不够。但是我换了一个有USB3.1 Gen2的台式机(里面有三星 960 Pro),实际传输速度也只有600Mb/s.
2.DIY可以更便宜。因为USB的限速,没必要买那么高端的SSD,比如WD SN550就很好了,这样和直接买品牌的SSD比差价就更大了。
3.除了自己爽,用处不大。要达到1GB/s的速度对电脑也有要求,实际情况是周围人电脑普遍老旧,根本发挥不了这么快的速度。
以上!谢谢制作视频
I see Ninja Cat. I upvote.
Can we use it mac book pro 2019 for applications..
This dude needs more subs.
He has some great potential.
and he is not yelling at you for a change...
I think your processing speed of hearing him is kinda SLOW
In India the pricing is a different story:
External
Samsung t7(500gb) - ₹5500 ~ $67
Sandisk (1tb) - ₹6500 ~ $80
Internal with enclosure:
Western digital green SSD (500gb) + orico enclosure - ₹1800+₹500=₹2300 ~ $30
So it's cheaper to buy internal with enclosure.
Do you use internal ssd with enclosure ?
If yes pls tell combination of ssd and enclosure
And also comment on durability/reliability for the same
Your voice is so calming, btw. Thank you.
Thank you too!
The Sandisk is very easy to crack open. Slightly bending the case (company logo facing upwards and bending the other way) will cause the plastic cover pop-open. Inside only 1 screw holding the board and the SSD. Difficult part is they are taped together :). Once you pop, you can't stop and can upgrade it.
Just saw another video that people cracked open as you said but SanDisk glued the M.2 card to their USB C interface card and the guy could not separate them. I think if he applies more force it may/may not separate but also the chance of destroying the whole unit as well.
sandisk E61 I wanted to know if one can replace the M.2 NVSE SSD with a faster one. Will the newer M.2 SSD from some other brand work with this "Enclosure"?
Great high quality video! Very informative and thorough. I saw on Reddit you’re getting a 27GN950. Can’t wait for the review!
Thanks! 27GN950 review will be out very soon!
@@ZenTechLife Can't wait! Great videos BTW. Keep it up!!
Your presentation quality is top notch !! Edit: Most indepth and well explained video out there !!
Much appreciated! Glad you enjoyed it!
@@ZenTechLife ❤️🙏
Super useful content, even broke down the price into US dollars. Definitely worth a like and subscribe!
Thanks for your support! Glad the video was helpful.
This was so well made. Thank you for answering my questions
Thanks for the kind words! Glad it was helpful to you 👍🏼
I've seen the Orico enclosure on sale for about $24 USD. So if you aren't in a hurry. AN other advantage to the DIY is if you are upgrading an NVMe drive in another computer you can make an external drive out of the old one.
Very true! Always a good way to reuse older NVMe drives.
Love your energy, for some reason you made me smile. Thanks kind sir, and have a nice day!
the enclosed SSD seems like it's also smaller/more portable. and you always have the option of putting it in your laptop later if you want. I'll have to do like you say, just check the prices in the local currency. For me, as long as it comes from a reputable brand, whichever is cheapest in China is good enough.
It might also be easier to re-sell that way as well. These external NVMe enclosures are going to continue to be very useful for many years, even if they're bottlenecking the speed of future NVMe SSDs. The m.2 form factor is just not as convenient as Sata 3 unfortunately, but with an m.2 NVMe SSD enclosure, it becomes a lot easier to be able to read or write to or from an NVMe SSD, mitigating the awkwardness of m.2 NVMe drives (especially the fact that most computers are only going to have one spot for them, which in many cases can be extremely difficult and time consuming to physically access (sometimes it's actually underneath the motherboard, such as with many ITX motherboards).
You can also buy PCIe adapter cards for m.2 NVMe SSDs (and also for sata m.2 SSDs), but those are still probably a lot more awkward and time consuming to work with than an external NVMe enclosure.
I would recommend buying a good quality NVMe enclosure which is built to last, because it's going to be useful for a long time to come, but hopefully which also has easy and tool-less installation.
My first time to watch you video. Love how you explain the SSD 👍
Glad you enjoyed it!
非常高汁呀👍Really helps my mind on struggling which SSD drive should I buy
Glad I could help! What did you decide on?
@@ZenTechLife
Will this workon 2009 Mac 27inch
El-Capitan 10.11
Nice presentation, please give up the good work and thanks for sharing.
Thank you too! I'm trying to find time to keep creating more videos.
This is exactly the kind of video i was looking for
Super clear, and practical also. Thanks
Thanks for your support!
This guy deserves a loooot mores subs !! GREAT info Bro
Keep it up 👍 with this pure benefit
I appreciate that! Thanks for the kind words!
Nice presentation, informative and well done! Thank you, i look forward to hearing & seeing your next video.
I am just a big fan of building and crafting stuff, diy in general is always my first option, but I did notice that the pre-built external ssds are more cost effective
You answered a lot of my questions... Thanks mate
Happy to help!
Great video
Got answers for questions in my mind
Glad I could help!
@@ZenTechLife your efforts deserve more subs and view
I'm sure one day this channel will reach high ..
Perfect video in the internet ❤❤❤
Thanks for the clear video. I am in the fence between the two options but one advantage of SanDisk is its built-in 256 bit AES hardware encryption which standard enclosure does not have. I may end up with SanDisk because of this encryption.
But only with SanDisk secure access software and that works only on windows and Mac .not on ipad or android .sad thing
@@vamsikrishna1934 I didn't know it cannot work on Android. Thanks a lot for the info. Any fast encryption alternative that work for both Windows and Android that you know of?
@@cafephin2024 it works on android bro . Sorry just now today I tested this . This is amazing man in terms of security .unfortunately no youtuber told about it . You just need to install SanDisk memory zone app on Android . And it's security is damn strong .not like samsung SSD . My only problem is it is not giving enough speed in smartphone .only 30mbps I am getting in smartphone .don't know the reason .on my old hdd laptop also it is slow .
@@vamsikrishna1934 wow, that's great news. Really thanks mate. It's good that from this great review video we can expand the information like this.
@@vamsikrishna1934 I think it's slow because we need USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 to get the theory 10G/s. The latest Google Pixel 6 pro only has USB-C 3.1 Gen 1 so we will have to wait for a while before mobile phone can reach faster speeds. My 2 years old is HP Elitebook x360 has only 1 high speed port.
recently purchased silicon power 1TB nvme gen 3 ssd for 43$ and 10Gbps type c enclosure for 15$.
enjoying 900+ MB/s speed for $58 which is insane . 😊😊
It's soooo helpful!!! So informative. Thanks so much.
Glad it helped!
There is another consideration now I have gone and built a DIY SSD. For whatever reason the enclosure I got doesn’t always auto mount in windows. You have to manually assign a drive letter via windows disk management the first you use it. Out of 4 computers I test I needed to do this for 3 of them. The 4th computer mounted and I tested transferring videos from a NAS. After a couple of minutes a time out error occurs and also it disconnects the diy ssd. When I tried to reconnect the laptop freezes.
On the other hand a Samsung T7 worked flawlessly as a removable drive.
So now I will only use this diy ssd for fast backup and transfers for my own computer and maybe other PCs I test.
very nice no nonsense video keep it up
Thanks a lot! Appreciate the kind comment.
Really great video, worth a sub!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it.
You are paying premium for the NVMe interface both on the drive and enclosure even though the USB connection won't let you use most of the extra speed. DIY external SSDs become even cheaper if you use a SATA SSD and SATA enclosure of the same capacity. The effective speed won't be much different as it's still over USB, and you can choose between 2.5 inch and m.2 2280 form factors (both form factors have SATA drives and enclosures available and at present, are a similar price). If you do this, you can beat the price of pre-manufactured portable SSDs quite significantly.
SATA USB3 enclosure are as little as $15 for reliable brands
Fantastic content. Thank you so much for the video
Thanks for your kind words!
Great video. Thanks for this
Glad you liked it!
Very well made video man !
Appreciate it! Thanks!
Great video with interesting facts!
Glad you enjoyed!
Wonder how you dealt with the rather extreme heat the NVMe SSD generates inside the enclosure.
I use the Ugreen enclosure with 500Gb of Samsung 970 EvoPlus. The heat is WAY burning (over 75C) I have to put a computer USB Fan on top of it and manages to cool it own to 37C max, all day long.
Thanks for watching! You're right about the heat. The DIY enclosure's heatsink gets quite hot during heavy operations, I haven't measured the temperature precisely, but it feels similar to when you hold a hot cup of coffee.
So far I've used it for 6 months and haven't noticed any problems yet, but at least I know the heatsink is working and pulling heat from the SSD! I don't really touch the SSD enclosure when I'm working, so I haven't really been too bothered by the heat.
This was super informative!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
some good points. Cheers from British Columbia
DIY Drives are the best and are cheaper over all and run faster as well and also last longer to .
Such professional content, love your style :)
Thank you for your kind words!
Dude this is awesome... I just want to ask if my S22 ultra can also read the ssd. Thanks
When it comes to - pre-built drives, I have a Samsung T5, has noticeably lower price per GB than T7.
When it comes to DIY - I think Sata ones should have been mentioned. Right now the best idea for getting an affordable, external ssd would be buying a 2.5 drive enclosure(with type c connector and 3.0 interface at the least) and a Samsung QVO 2.5 inch Sata ssd. It gives you really high capacity for the money, super high reliability and really good read speeds if you're using a 3.0 usb port.
Thanks for the video!
Great video….it is also a consideration that while more expensive, by a lot, the throughput of internal is above 2000 MB is it not?
Yes you're right, the internal SSD can hit over 2000MB speeds! To match the internal speeds, you'd need a Thunderbolt drive, which my new video covers here: ua-cam.com/video/QYJWL3JL4rg/v-deo.html
When I saw that cat creeping, I thought; “Did you see it?”
What cat? I don't have a cat. 😬
Great review! This is amazing! I bought a Dell XPS 9510 and decided to use that for my vid and photo editing. For work, I’ll get my m.2 nvme from my pc and buy an enclosure with 3.2 so I can just plug and play. Still deciding on the Sandisk and Samsung eternals. Thanks for helping me make a decision! Sub’d and liked to Zen!
Thanks for your support!
Thanks! this helped out a lot 🏁
Excellent... Thank you very much...
Welcome!
Great video, you earned yourself a sub :)
Awesome, thank you for subbing!
Thanks for this video. I'm actually looking at the ASUS ROG STRIX Arion Aluminum Alloy M.2 NVMe SSD External Portable Enclosure Case Adapter. Undecided as yet though..
I’m not familiar with that enclosure but ASUS have a good reputation for building some great products, especially their ROG label!
Excellent video! You touched on the bottlenecks that I have been looking for!
Glad it was helpful!
This was a great video. Thanks. 👍
Good Info here! If you use a USB 3.2 40GB enclosure with good heat sink you'll reach around 2.500 MB/s with this very SSD. Thanks
If you were uploading more regularly, you would have subs in the 100k+ minimum. All the best!
Thank you for the kind words. Sadly, family duties take priority, but I hope to be back soon!
@@ZenTechLife i subbed hopefully to obligate you. We are your children too haha keep safe!
Opening up your devices does not void your warranty. That would be a violation of the law if it did. The manufacturers may say that but they have the burden to show that you opening actually broke something for your warranty coverage to be legally denied. Those warranty void stickers are illegal.
Depending on where you live in. In the US, this doesn’t void your warranty. But in countries without this consumer protection, such as HK, this May void the warranty.
@@premiumutube9674 Yeah I was talking exclusively about the USA
@@Overonator
Thank you.
Yes, I had issue in Hong Kong, where I purchased an Asus and upgraded my SSD & RAM.
Warranty got voided. Consumer protection is weak here.
I doubt this would happen in EU / US.
So just a reminder for those to check their country’s consumer laws before doing what I’ve done.
Trying to find an external enclosure or reader for my Lenovo SSD, but trying to find the correct pin configuration is proving a challenge. It’s not M.2 but instead, it’s almost square
Great video, thank you!
Glad you liked it!
Awesome information
Thank you for a great video
Nice test but it would be much better if you would also measure temperature under load, both internal from sensor and external with some infrared gun. I would be very interested if the Sandis casing give better heat spread than the enclosure.
I'll definitely consider the operating temperatures for similar products in my future videos. Thanks for watching!
Great video!
Thanks! Hope you found it helpful!
Awesome video
Thanks!
WELL DONE
Thank you!
Very helpful
Glad it helped!
Great job with this video.
Thanks and glad you liked it!
thanks for this
You're welcome!
Very good video
Thanks! I appreciate the support!
Is the cable connection still good at ur enclosure? Some report that over time they have some connection problems...
Another point for the purchase of an enclosure would be an update of your system... From 500gb to 2tb for example... So the extra m.2 SSD can still be used as an external drive... 🤗👍🏻
Greetings from Taiwan 🙋🏼♂️
Sometimes DIYing your own SSD may be better options, as some SSD enclosures have better options like supercapacitor power loss protection which very few PCIe SSD enclosures offer, such as DockCase SSD enclosure which is kinda a must have for PCIe SSDs that also have their own RAM memory chips, just so they can safely flush their RAM memory contents onto NAND flash chips.
Nevertheless, store-bought USB SSDs are still okay for every day use. I just went with WD Black SN750 SSD, as I needed something reliable and efficient and I got 1 TB SN850X instead for my Ryzen Threadripper workstation, so I didn't want to waste the 500 GB SN750 SSD anyways, and yes I got the 10 second version of DockCase SSD enclosure also, which is massively better than the cheapo USB flash drives, especially cheaper when you have a PCIe SSD lying around for a while (Sabrent tool-less USB-C 3.2 PCIe SSD enclosure is like $30 a pop, generally).
I remember having a portable WD HDD, it was hardware encrypted, if the enclosure fails, your data is lost, no way of recovering it cause of the encryption. Something to think about, I don't know if other brands does the same.
The really fast SSD's get REALLY hot!
I have 2 sabrent enclosures and they are far better than orico. Build quality of the cases and cables are far superior in sabrent.
Can't argue with that. The sabrent enclosures are definitely more premium...including a more premium price!
What about Thunderbold Housings ? thanks
Hi Darren, I made a follow up video that looks at Thunderbolt options! Here is the link to it:
ua-cam.com/video/QYJWL3JL4rg/v-deo.html
bro I made and external ssd for my 8/256 gb MacBook Air m1 which is actually faster than original ssd of MacBook. It is great to use for edits.
Best video ❤❤
No one is comparing the heat dissipation between these and it is a concern
谢谢你的视频。闪迪 e61 我想知道是否可以用更快的 M.2 NVSE SSD 替换。其他品牌的较新的 M.2 SSD 可以与此“外壳”一起使用吗?
Great video! Do you have suggestions of where in HK I can go buy parts? I know there are some electronic centers in the Mong Kok area.
Thanks! Yeah, there are quite a few places depending where you live. I get most of my parts in Sham Shui Po as that's closest to me. Mong Kok is just as well stocked too. As you mentioned, any of the computer centers/malls will have everything. I recommend this website to check for pricing: www.price.com.hk
@@ZenTechLife thanks for the tips! I live in HK a couple month out of the year. I’m very much looking forward to going back. Thanks for the video, I’m subscribed
I second on Sham Shui Po. That's the place to be when you need pc parts and whatnots. My next go to place would be Wanchai Computer Centre.
@@rixtervidz thanks for the tip. Heading back to HK in January. I’ll pickup some gear there.
Tanya om:
1. Setelah pemakaian 2 tahun gimana? Adakah penurunan speed karena jatah TBWnya terpakai banyak
2. Sekarang yg extreme kan sudah keluar versi speed 1050mbps, bedanya apa dgn yg extreme pro?
Selain dr segi fisik (kalo yg extreme pro ini di sekelilingnya ada bezel orennya)
Saya punya yg extreme 1TB/ speed 550mbps. Setelah pemakaian 1 tahun buat editing video wedding, speednya turun jadi 350mbps.
Sekarang mau beli lg yg speed 1TB/1050mbps, tp bingung sama varian yg beredar di pasaran skrg.
Sandisk selalu rancu ngasih varian produknya, SDcardnya jg gitu, ada varian speed yg sama antara Extreme & Extreme pro 😂
Hi, great video and compression. I want to buy new SSD. And thinking about DIY version because the speed and portability. But my concerns are: how about compatibility with other devices? How about security? And lastly how about software or the hardware that connect to laptop(Mac)? Are all 3 things will merge and work like any other SSD like commercials products? Thanks for any advice and opinions on it.
DIY enclosures are compatible with Windows and macOS devices. They function the same as commercial products. You don't need any additional software to use a DIY SSD with a computer, it will detect it like a normal drive/USB. I'm not sure what you mean by security?
@@ZenTechLife thanks for the answer. Ok that is great it works like any other drive. By the Security I mean. If it is secure to use. And if can be used like password protected like some other SSD. As sometimes they got they own software. I guess not as it is just DIY drive. Anyway thanks for quick answer and information 👍😉
@@ZenTechLife Does it works with M1 iPad Pro as well?
@@amirshayanmoghtaderi5840 yes it works. if it has type c
Have you tested extended write speed? I have tried to transfer 400GB to the orico adata cobo and it slow to a crawl after about 100GB. I assume due to the heat which gets hot quickly. Wondering if that affects the pre-built as well.
Can’t say that I’ve tried extended write operations! But your assumption is probably correct about the heat causing the SSD to throttle itself. The prebuilt SanDisk featured in the video definitely runs cooler than the Orico, so my prediction is it should sustain high transfer speeds for a longer period too.
Please suggest a M.2 Nvme external SSD with speeds of 3000MB/s or higher
Will it be considered a “local hard drive” I’d it runs through usb
On my MacBook it appears as an ejectable hard drive. Not sure if that answers your question!
great content just needs better audio. Bit Crackly,. If you sort out your microphone and run audio correction software you will likely get more subs.
Thanks for the tip! I'll see if i can sort out my microphone setup so it's cleaner.
Suggest to upgrade your mic.
Thanks for the feedback. I'll have a look at how I can improve my audio setup!
Thanks. But would for example the Acasis 10-in-1 SSD enclosure wuth SSD added even work on a MBook Air 13" that has only two USB-C ports and was built in 2020?
Nice video, just subbed hope you get a lot more!
Thanks, I appreciate your support!
Great review. I was very much looking into doing the same, but I am quite discouraged by all the longevity issue people raise in comments on those DIY enclosure. Any comments?
Also, given the USB 3 cap on transfer speed, wouldn't it be worth looking into non-NVMe solution for DIY enclosure? Surely more economical and less risky.
Yup, if you are dealing with a USB 3.0 on your device than its not worth getting an NVMe since its a huge bottleneck, just go with a SATA 3
The SanDisk is definitely more robust and durable, but unless you throw your enclosure into a bag everyday, it should be fine. I've been using mine for 6 months, but I do put it into a tech pouch along with my cables and other miscellaneous items.
And yes, with USB3.1 capping out at 10Gbps, a SATA SSD will definitely be more economical. However, SATA SSDs typically peak at around 550Mb/s, so if your workflow requires very fast transfer speeds, then this solution can provide noticeable gains. Hope that helps!
Doble like for the GB Color
any new good combo [enclosure] in 2022?
For editing on Davinci
Please also show the temperature difference between orico usb 3.2 and sandisk portable ssd while moving files form laptop or vice - versa .
Can I play valorant or GTA 5 like game with the orico usb 3.2 external storage ,
If yes, then for how much long hours we can play games so that ssd inside the orico usb 3.2 enclosure should be safe from extreme heating.
I can't tell you the exact temperatures, but I've done many long hours of editing from both the Orico and Sandisk external SSD and they were both safe from overheating.
You can definitely play video games from an external drive with no worries of overheating. Games generally transfer loads of data during the loading screens only, so it'll be fine.
@@ZenTechLife thanks for reply 👍👍
USB3.0 to Mac SSD Enclosure USB3.0 Aluminum Alloy SSD Enclosure for 2013/2014/2015 MacBook Air/Pro/Retina for Apple SSD Case Box is there a better SSD For 2015 MacBook Pro cheaper??
Should you use a thermal pad on a M.2 in an external enclosure? E.G.: ADATA swordfish M.2 (500GB - 2TB) come with the thermal pad included and on the M.2. You don't add it. With a Elite M.2 NVMe PCIe 2280 External Enclosure w/ 1x USB C 3.1 Gen2 M/M Cable and 1x USB Type C 3.1 to USB 3.0 A Cable?
It depends if your enclosure has a heatsink or if the housing acts like a heatsink. The ORICO has a heatsink that sits above the M.2 SSD so I do use a thermal pad to help heat dissipation.
Considering it’s capped to 1GBps, a much cheaper nvme drive should be plenty
I just got an enclosure to retrieve my data from my old computer and put it on this one. Hope it works.
Did it?
Am i missing something - here in australia a sandisk extreme pro 1tb will cost you $400, the DIY 1tb Nvme costs $160. the enclosure costs $50. So the difference is massive. I have no idea why your DYI costs more??
Regional pricing differs a lot! Also, this video was made over a year ago, so maybe NVMe drives have come down in price since then.
Would a thunderbolt 3 external enclosure with a NMVE M. 2 SSD be great for video editing, in your opinion?
Hi! Yes a TB3 external enclosure will be more than fast enough to edit video directly from. That's actually what I do most of the time from my desk!
@@ZenTechLife thank you!
hi how does the enclosure in gaming performance to have the game installed on the external ssd, or it better to have the TB version of the enclusures?