NVMe or M2 SSD

Hello everyone! I plan to go SSD as my startup/boot on my iMac late 2015. Does it matter NVMe or M2 ssd ? If yes, whats better ? Thanks alot

Giorgi’s iMac

Posted on Jul 28, 2023 2:59 AM

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Posted on Jul 28, 2023 5:54 PM

I'd suggest an m.2 NVMe SSD.

NVMe is a protocol. m.2 is a form factor / connector. You don't have to pick one or the other. You can pick both.


The real question is SATA SSD vs NVMe. Both will be throttled to USB 3.0 (~500MBps), however if you later upgrade to a newer mac and reuse the drive a NVMe will run faster under USB 3.1/3.2. Also these days NVMe prices have dropped enough that they are often cheaper than SATA.

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Jul 28, 2023 5:54 PM in response to GiorgiApkhazava

I'd suggest an m.2 NVMe SSD.

NVMe is a protocol. m.2 is a form factor / connector. You don't have to pick one or the other. You can pick both.


The real question is SATA SSD vs NVMe. Both will be throttled to USB 3.0 (~500MBps), however if you later upgrade to a newer mac and reuse the drive a NVMe will run faster under USB 3.1/3.2. Also these days NVMe prices have dropped enough that they are often cheaper than SATA.

Jul 28, 2023 4:26 AM in response to GiorgiApkhazava

Considering you're going to be using a USB-A port on a 2015 model, I don't think it matters. Buy the one that appeals to you as best value. It's performance is going to be determined by the Mac and it's usable ports, so it's a tossup ... a personal choice.


I've used both a portable SSD and a separate enclosure drive. The difference was not detectable.

Jul 28, 2023 3:09 AM in response to GiorgiApkhazava

I used a Samsung T7 portable SSD on my Late 2015 21.5" Retina... worked flawlessly. Made the machine a joy to use.


Th only practical ports you can use are the USB-A ports. The Thunderbolt 2 ports are virtually useless. I got read speeds in the 450 MBps range which was 5x the internal HDD's speed.


If you choose the T7, or similar, you will not get the max potential speed of 1050 MBps.

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NVMe or M2 SSD

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