
It seems they simply give as compatible the list of the AHCI SSDs they've tested, and as incompatible the most known NVMe SSD models. The product page clearly stipules only compatible with a limited set of AHCI SSDs, but I do not see any reason for these "incompatibilities", as there is no other software/hardware standards for the PCIe M.2 AHCI models. NVMe SSD compatibility? Connector adapterĪt first for the connector, I often seen the Sintech adapter recommended to use the AHCI SSD above in a MacBook Air/Pro.

So standard PCIe M.2 devices seems to be up to 3x cheaper than the MacBook PCIe M.2 SSD. Kingston Digital HyperX Predator: $300 for 480GB.Corsair Force Series MP500: $316 for 480GB.Globally, an officially supported MacBook SSD (PCIe M.2 AHCI with a proprietary 12+16pin connector) cost from about $1 to $2 per GB, while equivalent PC SSD (PCIe M.2 AHCI and NVMe with a key M connector) cost from about $0.4 to $1 per GB. For example, with the Macbook Air/Pro 2013, 20 models: Officially supported MacBook SSDs are really expensive.

Can anyone confirm or disprove the support of NVMe drives (like the Samsung 960) by the Sintech M.2 PCIe SSD MacBook adapters for macOS Sierra and High Sierra, or would you have any information that could help me confirm or disprove this support?īelow are the results of my research so far.
