GRAPH LEGEND
MP Fusion = 'home grown' Fusion volume on the 2010 Mac Pro 6-core created using an OWC Mercury Extreme Pro 120GB SSD mounted the Apricorn Velocity x2 PCIe card and a Hitachi 7K3000 2TB HDD connected to the HighPoint RocketCache x8 PCIe card
OWC SSD = OWC Mercury Extreme Pro 240GB SSD (upgrade to 2012 mini sold by OWC)
factory SSD = 2012 Mac mini with the Apple 256GB SSD CTO option
factory Fusion = 2012 Mac mini with the Apple Fusion 1TB drive CTO option
7K HDD = Hitachi 7K3000 7200rpm 2TB HDD connected to a 6Gb/s host adapter (to represent a typical fast 7K Hard Disk Drive)
factory HDD = Apple's factory 'stock' 5400 rpm 1TB HDD for the 2012 Mac mini Core i7
ANALYSIS
We plan to expand on this topic as well as alternatives to the Fusion but suffice to say that the performance of the Apple Fusion drive is impressive and promises the best of both storage worlds: speed and space.
It's also nice to know that you can 'roll your own' Fusion volume on the Mac Pro like we did. But is that something you really should do? Is there any downside? Lloyd Chambers argues that, 'The 'Fusion' option isn’t just a poor value— it actively reduces the robustness, reliability and versatility of the Mac Mini.'
SPECIAL THANKS to Other World Computing test lab for helping provide test results for this article. Check out their memory and storage upgrades for all models of Mac mini.
MUST READ
For expanded discussions of the Fusion drive, how it works, and how you can create your own, click these links:
Anandtech's 'Understanding Apple's Fusion Drive'
JollyJinx's 'Fusion drive on older Macs? YES!
ArsTechnica 'Fusion Drive: How it works and how to roll your own.'
MacPerformanceGuide's 'Dual Drives Are Better than Fusion'
Apple's FAQ on the Fusion drive for (late 2012 Mac mini and (late 2012) iMac
ArsTechnica tears apart the Fusion drive
Feedback or comments? Contact me , mad scientist.
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