Pci For Mac Mini
2021年3月2日Download here: http://gg.gg/oif0g
2006-2008 Mac Mini SATA Card (mini-PCIe) Install/Mod for eSATA use
Updated: Sept 7th, 2010 (more info in ’Raoul’s’ report again)
Updated: Oct. 13th, 2010 (Note about later Mini’s)
Updated: Jan 10th, 2011 (another report)
Updated: Sept 17th, 2012 (another report)
Updated: Apr 29th, 2014 (Delock SATA3 card report)
Updated: Dec 5th, 2014 (SYBA SD-MPE40056 card report) NOTE/FYI:2009 and later Mac Minis DO NOT have a Mini-PCIe Airport card and therefore
The mainboard basically supports up to 16GB DDR3 RAM and it comes with a full-size mini PCI Express slot with mSATA support and a half-size one too. These 7 Mac mini alternatives ought to. Mac mini enclosure: Internal enclosure to secure optional Mac mini with Thunderbolt 3 ports (rackmount chassis only) Bandwidth: Thunderbolt interface: 40 Gbit/s. PCIe interface: 2,750 MB/s. Power supply: 96W: Operating temperature: 32º–95º F (0º–35º C) Dimensions (H x W x D) 1U rack. Desktop chassis (with feet): 9.4 x 2.2 x 14.5 inches.cannot use this mod. Many Intel-based Macs have had a Mini-PCIe slot Airport Extreme card (even the AE ’G’ card in early intel-based macs), but some later models have combo Airport/BT cards that are not Mini-PCIe form factor, such as the 2009 and later Minis. PPC Macs also do not have Mini-PCIe Airport cards. (My G5 has a mini-PCI Airport Ext. card, not Mini-PCIe. Original (802.11B) Airport cards were based on a subset of PCMCIA.) Verify your Mac has a Mini-PCIe Airport card slot BEFORE buying a Mini-PCIe SATA card.)
(FYI: Here’s a link to a page with notes/pix from iMac owners that did this same mod and a Photo Gallery/Guide to iMac eSATA Card Install/Mod.)
This page has reports/replies to a report here originally in August 2010. A complete take-apart for the mini is not included but here’s OWC’s 2006-2007 Mini page of take-apart videos. No model named 2008 series but 2009’s and later had major changes and no mini-pcie airport card/slot. (I checked ifixit but was only able to find their 2009 and 2010 mini takeapart guides there.)
Reports below are from 2006 (mini 1,1) and 2007 (Mini 2,1) Mac Mini owners. (The mini 2,1 was also sold thru 2008 until mini 3,1 model was intro’d in spring 2009.) Again this mod is NOT usable with 2009 (mini 3,1) and later mini models which do not have Mini-PCIe Airport cards. (A Mini-PCIe Airport card slot is required of course for this mod to work.) Early Intel-based Minis (1,1 and 2,1) also had a Socketed CPU, a plus for CPU upgrades/swaps. Pci For Mac Mini Usb
Reader Reports/Feedback on Mac Mini 1,1/Mini 2,1 eSATA Card Mod:
(Don’t forget that Driver Installs are required for the SI3132 based cards.)
When I read the reader report (in Aug 24th, 2010 news page here - a copy is below) of a SATA card [Commell MPX-3132] that was compatible with an (intel-based) Mac Mini, I was immediately interested. I too have a 2007 Mini currently used for DTP work. Though maxed out at 3Gb, it struggles with huge PhotoShop files especially when used in conjunction with Quark and Word. I am using a 1394a external drive as a scratch disk but this is hardly an ideal situation. Gaining access to a fast scratch disk was appealing as was the prospect of utilizing cheap and fast eSata drives (firewire enclosures have traditionally been far more expensive). Pci For Mac Mini Download
The German poster apparently had apparently revealed his discovery on another website’s forums and, surprising to me, it elicited few responses. What it did help with was pointing me towards a US webstore that stocked the card.
You can actually purchase them here: www.globalamericaninc.com
I called Global American and purchased the card for $61.63 ( including freight. Not exactly cheap but if the card delivered I figured it was worth it. They shipped the card the same day and I received it three days later. (Incidentally, the salesperson I spoke to mentioned that this was a popular item and they were down to seven units left in inventory.)
I later saw xlr8yourmac.com’s request for user reports on compatibility so I decided to record my installation in detail so that other Mini users considering this upgrade would be able to make an informed choice. (Sorry for the quality of the pictures but I was too lazy to employ proper lighting..)
Above is the interior of my Mini. I previously upgraded the Wi-fi to 11n but since I seldom used this connection (my bandwidth intensive workload needed the wired gigabit), it was a small loss to part with the card.
This is the Commell card seated in the mini-PCIe slot.
In order to perform some before and after comparisons, I ran AJA System Test on a drive mechanism (a Samsung HD502HI). The ’before’ tests are with the drive in a USB enclosure.
Pretty pathetic. Firewire performs better but is still capped at about 34 MB/s.
The (2) cables provided end in standard Sata terminals. You’ll have to purchase a Sata-eSata cable adapter in order to hook up an eSata enclosure. Although I purchased one, it had not arrived in time so I was forced to do my testing with a direct connection to the drive.
Once you’ve installed the card, you’ll immediately notice that the cables are not very flexible. This would have serious repercussions later on. For my initial ’proof of concept’ testing, I simply folded it over and ran it under the drive cage. Removing the DVD facilitated this.
Having read what little I could find about this installation, I recalled that the RAID drivers had to be used from this page (same SI drivers page linked earlier). This proved to be absolutely true. The non-RAID driver does not work. (A note in red was added to that earlier post, however one report (below) said he’s using the non-RAID driver w/10.6.4 but he’s using a different card/adapter - a Mini-PCIe to (std) PCIe adapter. (Update: In Feb 2014, the non-RAID v1.2.5.0 driver was reported to still work in OS X 10.9.2 by a SIL3132 SATA card used (w/MBP).)
I’m running Leopard (10.5.8) not 10.6.X so I used the 10.5 RAID5 driver. (see below for a OSX 10.6.4 Mini owner report on this mod working.) I was a little leery because it listed 10.4.9, 10.4.10 & 10.5.1 as supported. I hoped having 10.5.8 wouldn’t prove problematic (and thankfully it didn’t).
The (raid) driver installs a kext as well as a java-based RAID utility. Note that there is NO uninstaller included.
After installation you have to reboot. I did so hoping I hadn’t wasted my money and possibly faced having to reinstall my OS. When the Finder appeared, I was pleased to see my Sata drive mounted on the desktop! (The same drive that had previously been in my USB enclosure.) Awesome.
I did another AJA System Test to compare performance. The numbers speak for themselves.
So far, so good. The numbers were great, especially from a run of the mill drive. The internal WD Caviar Black I have as my Mini’s internal boot drive were 15-20 MB/s slower!
Now that I knew the card would work in Leopard, I faced the far tougher problem of cable management. Trust me, this is the real problem. Intuitively this card is not designed for the Mini and the very inflexible cables would be a chore to permanently install.
Most of my effort in this project was invested in figuring out what to do with the cables. I considered trimming off the sleeving but was discouraged by a number of small splices made to the ends of the cable covered in shrink tubing. I felt there was a good reason why these were so encapsulated and didn’t want to risk these irreplaceable unique cables.
In the end, I discovered that you have to run the cables flat under the drive cage. There is absolutely no clearance to fold the cables over. Bends would have to be made after they cleared the cage. Fortunately the card connector end has loose wire that could be easily folded over. Even then, it caused a bulging of the drive cage once it was screwed down. I hoped that the backplane would seat far enough in to ensure a good connection.
It proved impossible to get good pictures of the flattened cables running out from under the drive cage. However, this is how I got the cables twisted once they cleared the cage.
There’s a chamfer on the back left support post that I razored off in order to provide more clearance when routing the cables out the back.
In order to get the cover back on, I had to cut away a small section of the aluminum casing to the right of the USB ports. This turned out to be far less atrocious looking than I feared.
In conclusion, the Commell MPX-3132 does work (at least in Leopard) provided you use the RAID drivers. Cable management though may dissuade you from choosing this upgrade.
I hope this guide was informative.
© 2010 Steve Johansson. All rights reserved.
(Permission to post here was given)
Other Mini Owner Reports on Mac Mini eSATA card Mods: (later added first) (added 12/5/2014, Assume 2006/2007 (pre-2009) mini)
Just a quick note for your page.. I have the following parts working in a quick test. The attached SATA drive worked (though not for booting). Ultimately I plan to cut a slot in the white plastic edge to feed the ribbon cable outside the mini, and reassemble everything.
Cheers! -Matt
(newegg links)
Flexible Mini PCI Express card Extender/Extension Cable
SYBA SD-MPE40056 Mini PCI-Express 2.0 SATA III 2-port card (ASM1061 chipset)
Thanks. What OS X version are you using? (and no card drivers required?)
Delock Mini-PCIe SATA card (ASMedia controller, not Silicon Image 3132 used in earlier reports)
(added 4/29/2014)
’eSATA card report - 2007 Mac Mini (OS X Mountain Lion)
I have a 2007 MacMini 2.0GHz, and the Optical Drive port is dead. I wanted a fast drive but couldn’t use the boot drive as I needed 3TB for video.
I looked at the information on your page.. (this page), hoping to find a suitable card here in the UK to work. I took a gamble on this card from Amazon UK http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0093IYYZM/
Delock MiniPCIe I/O PCIe Module with Full Size 6GBps 2x SATA.
(IIRC, this card uses the ASMedia 106x chipset.)
.. and it worked PERFECTLY with no configuration and no drivers.
(I did have to buy an extension cable from eBay/China, but that was only £12)
Thought maybe you’d like to include it on your page.
I am very pleased and have a 3TB hard drive attached now.
No WiFi now, but don’t really use it anyhow.
Thanks!
-Sciamo’
Thank you. Glad it worked out. (Back in Feb 2014, an iMac owner (OS X 10.9.x) said he had problems with an ASmedia AS1061 based card (CONRAD-SATA-ASM1061) but it may have been a bad sample.) (added 9/17/2012)
’2007 Mac Mini with Commell MPX-3132 Card
I used your website as a guide to install one of the Commell MPX-3132 SATA Cards in a 2.1 Mac Mini, with favorable results. I had already upgraded the processor to a 2.33 GHz Core2Duo, and replaced the hard drive with an Intel 120GB SSD. I also pulled the DVD drive and put the originally upgraded 500GB hard drive in an enclosure from iFixit in place of the DVD drive.
I was concerned that I would need to use a Raid 0 or 1 setup with the two external drives attached to the new SATA card, but it turns out that wasn’t required. After installing the Silicon Image Base, and then the Raid Management Drivers, both drives appeared on the Desktop and were behaving like other external drives. No Raid setup was needed.
-Mike K.’
(added 1/10/2011)
’A few months back you had an article on replacing the Airport card on a (2006-2007) Mac Mini with a (Mini-PCIe eSATA card. (Also articles here on the same card swap for intel-based iMacs reports here and Photo Gallery/Guide to iMac eSATA Card Install/Mod.-Ed) Just thought I would follow-up and say I did the mod and it works really well. Used the same card from Global American as in the article and works great with the RAID driver. Hooked up several different drives including a 2 drive port multiplier case (will try with 5 drive case when time allows) and everything so far has worked really well - particularly hot swapping drives. Other than the lack of ability to boot off connected drive it is pretty nice. In fact works as well as some FirmTek controllers I have in 2 Mac Pros. Have not tested with really fast drives yet but on the drives tested so far seems comparable to same drives on FirmTek controllers.
Using a USB 802.11n adapter for wireless access - which also works well - not quite as handy as Airport software but it is 802.11n.
1.66GHz Mac Mini (2006? model), OS X 10.6.5 (not updated to 10.6.6 yet) - spare machine not really being used for anything else.
Done with the idea of using as a backup server and wanted faster storage than FW400 or USB 2.0. May even use it as file server running Leopard Server - but the lack of a fast alternate boot drive is a bit of a handicap.
Thanks for the article - never would have thought of it otherwise.
-Leonard
(added 9/7/2010 - note he is NOT using the Mini-PCIe card others here used.)
’Yes, I’m using a Macmini2,1 (2007 modelPci For Mac Mini Software) where I’ve removed the Airport card and installed a Mini-PCIe to PCIe cable. (I wrote to ask for a link to that cable/adapter. See below for info.-Mike) And I’m using a Sil3132 2-port SATA card which is being recognised and working fine under 10.6.4 client.
(After some saying only the RAID driver install worked for this, I asked what version of the driver he used. For (full size) PCI Express cards (in a Mac pro) and Expresscard slot (i.e. MacBook Pro) Sil3132 cards, I’ve always used the non-RAID drivers personally. But I don’t have a Mini (Mac) to try these mods.-Mike)
I specifically wanted the non-raid driver as ZFS works best with a JBOD setup. (an optimal ZFS setup is to have direct access to all of the drive) Here are the details of the driver from ASP. SiliconImage3132:
Version: 1.2.3
Last Modified: 2/06/10 5:04 PM
Kind: Universal
Architectures: i386, ppc, x86_64
64-Bit (Intel): Yes
Location: /System/Library/Extensions/SiliconImage3132.kext
Kext Version: 1.2.3
Load Address: 0x93a000
Valid: Yes
Authentic: Yes
Dependencies: Satisfied
A nice thing about using ZFS is that I now don’t care about using cheap nonserver-grade disks. (I’ve never used ZFS but thought apple had dropped support for it? (IIRC?))
Yes that’s correct.. However the project still lives on - http://code.google.com/p/maczfs/. My colleague (Michael Shaw) made the icon for the project. Someone has even implemented basic support for ZFS into Disk Utility. The build version is somewhat behind the current solaris build, but Alex is doing an almighty job in following Apple’s and Sun’s source trees.
(More info added about his PCIe card and the mini-PCIe to PCIe card adapter/cable he used. Other reports here just used a Mini-PCIe card.-Mike)
www.addonics.com/products/host_controller/adsa3gpx1-2em.asp - ADSA3GPX1-2EM, 2 Port eSATA II PCI-E Controller for Mac Pro.
(You can find very cheap PCIe 3132 SATA cards. Some are under $20 at even Brick and Mortar stores.
Here’s his later mail tonight with info on the Mini-PCIe to PCIe (full size) adapter/cable.-Mike)
Search for: PEMINI2X1 (third entry from bottom) at: www.adexelec.com/pciexp.htm.
Is avast security for mac good review. All sorts of goodies on this page.. They delivered to me in Australia!
(Not sure how many Mini owners would go that route (adapter to a full size PCIe card), but if you did and if I had a choice I’d prefer some other (not SIL3132 based) PCIe card. For instance a natively supported (in 10.5.x and 10.6.x) PCIe SATA card like NewerTech’s 6G model instead. (No drivers to install and better than typical 3132 card performance without being overly expensive as noted in my review/comparison back in Jan.)-Mike)
(The rest of his original report follows)
I’ve connected up 2 Silicon Image Port Multipliers to each SATA port and now have a total of 10 SATA ports available.
Here are some pics a crude proof-of-concept using 2 1TB drives. http://gallery.me.com/tangles#100082 (no longer online)
And here is the macmini inside an old Apple Network Server (ANS500) case. gallery.me.com/tangles#100084 (Link no longer valid)
The ANS500 (I called it LittleBox on my network) used to house a G4 motherboard (Gigabit series) with an upgraded 1.33GHz dual CPU. I had ZFS running on this back when Apple announced ZFS support, using 2 PCI Acard 4 port IDE controllers with 500GB drives for the raidz ZFS pool.
This is why LittleBox looks rather messy and adhoc inside, as I’ve only just sat it there and used velcro on it’s base to keep it in place. (the mini has always been a temporary build)
Currently, the macmini is serving up two ZFS pools via OSX using NFS exports to our machines on the network (macmini3,1 in lounge, MacPro3,1 in study, nforce790i in study, and a MacBookPro4,1)
I have iTunes’, iPhoto’s, XBMC’s and EyeTV’s data all on a ZFS pool which works really really well now that I got rid of AFP!! (AFP and ZFS = bad)
I really love this set up now. I sleep better knowing my data (i.e. photos) are protected from silent data corruption (blogs.sun.com/bonwick/entry/raid_z) etc etc
So, yes, back to your original query, it’s working for me, speed is great (PCIe-1.0 1x lane is 250MB/sec each way! - www.directron.com/expressguide.html)
(YMMV. Any Interface spec’s max rate (the theoretical max) is rarely seen in real-world use (due to other hardware bottlenecks, overhead, etc).)
Cheers, Raoul C.’
And here’s a copy of the original/first report (from Aug 24, 2010 news page)
From a reader mail on Aug 23rd, 2010 (a reader in Germany)
(BTW: This could also be usable for iMacs w/mod to bring the cables out the bottom. Not checked the older iMacs but the 2010 models have the airport card very near the bottom and it should be possible to run the cables out the bottom with a mod to the plate, similar to what OWC does with their 27in iMac (onboard) eSATA mod.
Update/FYI: Here’s a link to a page with notes/pix from an iMac owner that did this same mod.) ’Hi, I’ve read your site for more than 10 years and it helped me a lot upgrading my old beloved 7500. But in late 2007 I finally switched to a new mac mini and upgraded RAM and HD. Now I want to report about removing my Airport card (which I don’t need) and replacing it with a mini PCI-e SATA card, since this is not very common.
(FYI: Of course you lose your Airport card with this mod, but if you must have wireless, there’s USB Wireless options or better yet (IMO) an Ethernet to 802.11n (and g/b) Wireless bridge. Rather than the usual single ethernet port models, I’d be more interested in a model with 4 ethernet ports, like Buffalo WLITX4AG300N.)
The switch is no more difficult than installing memory and HD. To move out the cables it was necesarry to remove a small peace of the case. (I.E. for the eSATA card cable pass-thru. I asked if he could send a pix of that - he said he would over the weekend.) You should not try the switch if you are not used to this kind of work.
I used
https://diarynote.indered.space
2006-2008 Mac Mini SATA Card (mini-PCIe) Install/Mod for eSATA use
Updated: Sept 7th, 2010 (more info in ’Raoul’s’ report again)
Updated: Oct. 13th, 2010 (Note about later Mini’s)
Updated: Jan 10th, 2011 (another report)
Updated: Sept 17th, 2012 (another report)
Updated: Apr 29th, 2014 (Delock SATA3 card report)
Updated: Dec 5th, 2014 (SYBA SD-MPE40056 card report) NOTE/FYI:2009 and later Mac Minis DO NOT have a Mini-PCIe Airport card and therefore
The mainboard basically supports up to 16GB DDR3 RAM and it comes with a full-size mini PCI Express slot with mSATA support and a half-size one too. These 7 Mac mini alternatives ought to. Mac mini enclosure: Internal enclosure to secure optional Mac mini with Thunderbolt 3 ports (rackmount chassis only) Bandwidth: Thunderbolt interface: 40 Gbit/s. PCIe interface: 2,750 MB/s. Power supply: 96W: Operating temperature: 32º–95º F (0º–35º C) Dimensions (H x W x D) 1U rack. Desktop chassis (with feet): 9.4 x 2.2 x 14.5 inches.cannot use this mod. Many Intel-based Macs have had a Mini-PCIe slot Airport Extreme card (even the AE ’G’ card in early intel-based macs), but some later models have combo Airport/BT cards that are not Mini-PCIe form factor, such as the 2009 and later Minis. PPC Macs also do not have Mini-PCIe Airport cards. (My G5 has a mini-PCI Airport Ext. card, not Mini-PCIe. Original (802.11B) Airport cards were based on a subset of PCMCIA.) Verify your Mac has a Mini-PCIe Airport card slot BEFORE buying a Mini-PCIe SATA card.)
(FYI: Here’s a link to a page with notes/pix from iMac owners that did this same mod and a Photo Gallery/Guide to iMac eSATA Card Install/Mod.)
This page has reports/replies to a report here originally in August 2010. A complete take-apart for the mini is not included but here’s OWC’s 2006-2007 Mini page of take-apart videos. No model named 2008 series but 2009’s and later had major changes and no mini-pcie airport card/slot. (I checked ifixit but was only able to find their 2009 and 2010 mini takeapart guides there.)
Reports below are from 2006 (mini 1,1) and 2007 (Mini 2,1) Mac Mini owners. (The mini 2,1 was also sold thru 2008 until mini 3,1 model was intro’d in spring 2009.) Again this mod is NOT usable with 2009 (mini 3,1) and later mini models which do not have Mini-PCIe Airport cards. (A Mini-PCIe Airport card slot is required of course for this mod to work.) Early Intel-based Minis (1,1 and 2,1) also had a Socketed CPU, a plus for CPU upgrades/swaps. Pci For Mac Mini Usb
Reader Reports/Feedback on Mac Mini 1,1/Mini 2,1 eSATA Card Mod:
(Don’t forget that Driver Installs are required for the SI3132 based cards.)
When I read the reader report (in Aug 24th, 2010 news page here - a copy is below) of a SATA card [Commell MPX-3132] that was compatible with an (intel-based) Mac Mini, I was immediately interested. I too have a 2007 Mini currently used for DTP work. Though maxed out at 3Gb, it struggles with huge PhotoShop files especially when used in conjunction with Quark and Word. I am using a 1394a external drive as a scratch disk but this is hardly an ideal situation. Gaining access to a fast scratch disk was appealing as was the prospect of utilizing cheap and fast eSata drives (firewire enclosures have traditionally been far more expensive). Pci For Mac Mini Download
The German poster apparently had apparently revealed his discovery on another website’s forums and, surprising to me, it elicited few responses. What it did help with was pointing me towards a US webstore that stocked the card.
You can actually purchase them here: www.globalamericaninc.com
I called Global American and purchased the card for $61.63 ( including freight. Not exactly cheap but if the card delivered I figured it was worth it. They shipped the card the same day and I received it three days later. (Incidentally, the salesperson I spoke to mentioned that this was a popular item and they were down to seven units left in inventory.)
I later saw xlr8yourmac.com’s request for user reports on compatibility so I decided to record my installation in detail so that other Mini users considering this upgrade would be able to make an informed choice. (Sorry for the quality of the pictures but I was too lazy to employ proper lighting..)
Above is the interior of my Mini. I previously upgraded the Wi-fi to 11n but since I seldom used this connection (my bandwidth intensive workload needed the wired gigabit), it was a small loss to part with the card.
This is the Commell card seated in the mini-PCIe slot.
In order to perform some before and after comparisons, I ran AJA System Test on a drive mechanism (a Samsung HD502HI). The ’before’ tests are with the drive in a USB enclosure.
Pretty pathetic. Firewire performs better but is still capped at about 34 MB/s.
The (2) cables provided end in standard Sata terminals. You’ll have to purchase a Sata-eSata cable adapter in order to hook up an eSata enclosure. Although I purchased one, it had not arrived in time so I was forced to do my testing with a direct connection to the drive.
Once you’ve installed the card, you’ll immediately notice that the cables are not very flexible. This would have serious repercussions later on. For my initial ’proof of concept’ testing, I simply folded it over and ran it under the drive cage. Removing the DVD facilitated this.
Having read what little I could find about this installation, I recalled that the RAID drivers had to be used from this page (same SI drivers page linked earlier). This proved to be absolutely true. The non-RAID driver does not work. (A note in red was added to that earlier post, however one report (below) said he’s using the non-RAID driver w/10.6.4 but he’s using a different card/adapter - a Mini-PCIe to (std) PCIe adapter. (Update: In Feb 2014, the non-RAID v1.2.5.0 driver was reported to still work in OS X 10.9.2 by a SIL3132 SATA card used (w/MBP).)
I’m running Leopard (10.5.8) not 10.6.X so I used the 10.5 RAID5 driver. (see below for a OSX 10.6.4 Mini owner report on this mod working.) I was a little leery because it listed 10.4.9, 10.4.10 & 10.5.1 as supported. I hoped having 10.5.8 wouldn’t prove problematic (and thankfully it didn’t).
The (raid) driver installs a kext as well as a java-based RAID utility. Note that there is NO uninstaller included.
After installation you have to reboot. I did so hoping I hadn’t wasted my money and possibly faced having to reinstall my OS. When the Finder appeared, I was pleased to see my Sata drive mounted on the desktop! (The same drive that had previously been in my USB enclosure.) Awesome.
I did another AJA System Test to compare performance. The numbers speak for themselves.
So far, so good. The numbers were great, especially from a run of the mill drive. The internal WD Caviar Black I have as my Mini’s internal boot drive were 15-20 MB/s slower!
Now that I knew the card would work in Leopard, I faced the far tougher problem of cable management. Trust me, this is the real problem. Intuitively this card is not designed for the Mini and the very inflexible cables would be a chore to permanently install.
Most of my effort in this project was invested in figuring out what to do with the cables. I considered trimming off the sleeving but was discouraged by a number of small splices made to the ends of the cable covered in shrink tubing. I felt there was a good reason why these were so encapsulated and didn’t want to risk these irreplaceable unique cables.
In the end, I discovered that you have to run the cables flat under the drive cage. There is absolutely no clearance to fold the cables over. Bends would have to be made after they cleared the cage. Fortunately the card connector end has loose wire that could be easily folded over. Even then, it caused a bulging of the drive cage once it was screwed down. I hoped that the backplane would seat far enough in to ensure a good connection.
It proved impossible to get good pictures of the flattened cables running out from under the drive cage. However, this is how I got the cables twisted once they cleared the cage.
There’s a chamfer on the back left support post that I razored off in order to provide more clearance when routing the cables out the back.
In order to get the cover back on, I had to cut away a small section of the aluminum casing to the right of the USB ports. This turned out to be far less atrocious looking than I feared.
In conclusion, the Commell MPX-3132 does work (at least in Leopard) provided you use the RAID drivers. Cable management though may dissuade you from choosing this upgrade.
I hope this guide was informative.
© 2010 Steve Johansson. All rights reserved.
(Permission to post here was given)
Other Mini Owner Reports on Mac Mini eSATA card Mods: (later added first) (added 12/5/2014, Assume 2006/2007 (pre-2009) mini)
Just a quick note for your page.. I have the following parts working in a quick test. The attached SATA drive worked (though not for booting). Ultimately I plan to cut a slot in the white plastic edge to feed the ribbon cable outside the mini, and reassemble everything.
Cheers! -Matt
(newegg links)
Flexible Mini PCI Express card Extender/Extension Cable
SYBA SD-MPE40056 Mini PCI-Express 2.0 SATA III 2-port card (ASM1061 chipset)
Thanks. What OS X version are you using? (and no card drivers required?)
Delock Mini-PCIe SATA card (ASMedia controller, not Silicon Image 3132 used in earlier reports)
(added 4/29/2014)
’eSATA card report - 2007 Mac Mini (OS X Mountain Lion)
I have a 2007 MacMini 2.0GHz, and the Optical Drive port is dead. I wanted a fast drive but couldn’t use the boot drive as I needed 3TB for video.
I looked at the information on your page.. (this page), hoping to find a suitable card here in the UK to work. I took a gamble on this card from Amazon UK http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0093IYYZM/
Delock MiniPCIe I/O PCIe Module with Full Size 6GBps 2x SATA.
(IIRC, this card uses the ASMedia 106x chipset.)
.. and it worked PERFECTLY with no configuration and no drivers.
(I did have to buy an extension cable from eBay/China, but that was only £12)
Thought maybe you’d like to include it on your page.
I am very pleased and have a 3TB hard drive attached now.
No WiFi now, but don’t really use it anyhow.
Thanks!
-Sciamo’
Thank you. Glad it worked out. (Back in Feb 2014, an iMac owner (OS X 10.9.x) said he had problems with an ASmedia AS1061 based card (CONRAD-SATA-ASM1061) but it may have been a bad sample.) (added 9/17/2012)
’2007 Mac Mini with Commell MPX-3132 Card
I used your website as a guide to install one of the Commell MPX-3132 SATA Cards in a 2.1 Mac Mini, with favorable results. I had already upgraded the processor to a 2.33 GHz Core2Duo, and replaced the hard drive with an Intel 120GB SSD. I also pulled the DVD drive and put the originally upgraded 500GB hard drive in an enclosure from iFixit in place of the DVD drive.
I was concerned that I would need to use a Raid 0 or 1 setup with the two external drives attached to the new SATA card, but it turns out that wasn’t required. After installing the Silicon Image Base, and then the Raid Management Drivers, both drives appeared on the Desktop and were behaving like other external drives. No Raid setup was needed.
-Mike K.’
(added 1/10/2011)
’A few months back you had an article on replacing the Airport card on a (2006-2007) Mac Mini with a (Mini-PCIe eSATA card. (Also articles here on the same card swap for intel-based iMacs reports here and Photo Gallery/Guide to iMac eSATA Card Install/Mod.-Ed) Just thought I would follow-up and say I did the mod and it works really well. Used the same card from Global American as in the article and works great with the RAID driver. Hooked up several different drives including a 2 drive port multiplier case (will try with 5 drive case when time allows) and everything so far has worked really well - particularly hot swapping drives. Other than the lack of ability to boot off connected drive it is pretty nice. In fact works as well as some FirmTek controllers I have in 2 Mac Pros. Have not tested with really fast drives yet but on the drives tested so far seems comparable to same drives on FirmTek controllers.
Using a USB 802.11n adapter for wireless access - which also works well - not quite as handy as Airport software but it is 802.11n.
1.66GHz Mac Mini (2006? model), OS X 10.6.5 (not updated to 10.6.6 yet) - spare machine not really being used for anything else.
Done with the idea of using as a backup server and wanted faster storage than FW400 or USB 2.0. May even use it as file server running Leopard Server - but the lack of a fast alternate boot drive is a bit of a handicap.
Thanks for the article - never would have thought of it otherwise.
-Leonard
(added 9/7/2010 - note he is NOT using the Mini-PCIe card others here used.)
’Yes, I’m using a Macmini2,1 (2007 modelPci For Mac Mini Software) where I’ve removed the Airport card and installed a Mini-PCIe to PCIe cable. (I wrote to ask for a link to that cable/adapter. See below for info.-Mike) And I’m using a Sil3132 2-port SATA card which is being recognised and working fine under 10.6.4 client.
(After some saying only the RAID driver install worked for this, I asked what version of the driver he used. For (full size) PCI Express cards (in a Mac pro) and Expresscard slot (i.e. MacBook Pro) Sil3132 cards, I’ve always used the non-RAID drivers personally. But I don’t have a Mini (Mac) to try these mods.-Mike)
I specifically wanted the non-raid driver as ZFS works best with a JBOD setup. (an optimal ZFS setup is to have direct access to all of the drive) Here are the details of the driver from ASP. SiliconImage3132:
Version: 1.2.3
Last Modified: 2/06/10 5:04 PM
Kind: Universal
Architectures: i386, ppc, x86_64
64-Bit (Intel): Yes
Location: /System/Library/Extensions/SiliconImage3132.kext
Kext Version: 1.2.3
Load Address: 0x93a000
Valid: Yes
Authentic: Yes
Dependencies: Satisfied
A nice thing about using ZFS is that I now don’t care about using cheap nonserver-grade disks. (I’ve never used ZFS but thought apple had dropped support for it? (IIRC?))
Yes that’s correct.. However the project still lives on - http://code.google.com/p/maczfs/. My colleague (Michael Shaw) made the icon for the project. Someone has even implemented basic support for ZFS into Disk Utility. The build version is somewhat behind the current solaris build, but Alex is doing an almighty job in following Apple’s and Sun’s source trees.
(More info added about his PCIe card and the mini-PCIe to PCIe card adapter/cable he used. Other reports here just used a Mini-PCIe card.-Mike)
www.addonics.com/products/host_controller/adsa3gpx1-2em.asp - ADSA3GPX1-2EM, 2 Port eSATA II PCI-E Controller for Mac Pro.
(You can find very cheap PCIe 3132 SATA cards. Some are under $20 at even Brick and Mortar stores.
Here’s his later mail tonight with info on the Mini-PCIe to PCIe (full size) adapter/cable.-Mike)
Search for: PEMINI2X1 (third entry from bottom) at: www.adexelec.com/pciexp.htm.
Is avast security for mac good review. All sorts of goodies on this page.. They delivered to me in Australia!
(Not sure how many Mini owners would go that route (adapter to a full size PCIe card), but if you did and if I had a choice I’d prefer some other (not SIL3132 based) PCIe card. For instance a natively supported (in 10.5.x and 10.6.x) PCIe SATA card like NewerTech’s 6G model instead. (No drivers to install and better than typical 3132 card performance without being overly expensive as noted in my review/comparison back in Jan.)-Mike)
(The rest of his original report follows)
I’ve connected up 2 Silicon Image Port Multipliers to each SATA port and now have a total of 10 SATA ports available.
Here are some pics a crude proof-of-concept using 2 1TB drives. http://gallery.me.com/tangles#100082 (no longer online)
And here is the macmini inside an old Apple Network Server (ANS500) case. gallery.me.com/tangles#100084 (Link no longer valid)
The ANS500 (I called it LittleBox on my network) used to house a G4 motherboard (Gigabit series) with an upgraded 1.33GHz dual CPU. I had ZFS running on this back when Apple announced ZFS support, using 2 PCI Acard 4 port IDE controllers with 500GB drives for the raidz ZFS pool.
This is why LittleBox looks rather messy and adhoc inside, as I’ve only just sat it there and used velcro on it’s base to keep it in place. (the mini has always been a temporary build)
Currently, the macmini is serving up two ZFS pools via OSX using NFS exports to our machines on the network (macmini3,1 in lounge, MacPro3,1 in study, nforce790i in study, and a MacBookPro4,1)
I have iTunes’, iPhoto’s, XBMC’s and EyeTV’s data all on a ZFS pool which works really really well now that I got rid of AFP!! (AFP and ZFS = bad)
I really love this set up now. I sleep better knowing my data (i.e. photos) are protected from silent data corruption (blogs.sun.com/bonwick/entry/raid_z) etc etc
So, yes, back to your original query, it’s working for me, speed is great (PCIe-1.0 1x lane is 250MB/sec each way! - www.directron.com/expressguide.html)
(YMMV. Any Interface spec’s max rate (the theoretical max) is rarely seen in real-world use (due to other hardware bottlenecks, overhead, etc).)
Cheers, Raoul C.’
And here’s a copy of the original/first report (from Aug 24, 2010 news page)
From a reader mail on Aug 23rd, 2010 (a reader in Germany)
(BTW: This could also be usable for iMacs w/mod to bring the cables out the bottom. Not checked the older iMacs but the 2010 models have the airport card very near the bottom and it should be possible to run the cables out the bottom with a mod to the plate, similar to what OWC does with their 27in iMac (onboard) eSATA mod.
Update/FYI: Here’s a link to a page with notes/pix from an iMac owner that did this same mod.) ’Hi, I’ve read your site for more than 10 years and it helped me a lot upgrading my old beloved 7500. But in late 2007 I finally switched to a new mac mini and upgraded RAM and HD. Now I want to report about removing my Airport card (which I don’t need) and replacing it with a mini PCI-e SATA card, since this is not very common.
(FYI: Of course you lose your Airport card with this mod, but if you must have wireless, there’s USB Wireless options or better yet (IMO) an Ethernet to 802.11n (and g/b) Wireless bridge. Rather than the usual single ethernet port models, I’d be more interested in a model with 4 ethernet ports, like Buffalo WLITX4AG300N.)
The switch is no more difficult than installing memory and HD. To move out the cables it was necesarry to remove a small peace of the case. (I.E. for the eSATA card cable pass-thru. I asked if he could send a pix of that - he said he would over the weekend.) You should not try the switch if you are not used to this kind of work.
I used
https://diarynote.indered.space
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