![]() I don't notice any real world difference in loads with the current stripe. With four ssd's striped I imagine reads would be around 1.2 - 1.3k. Recently I was running out of space so I bought 2 x 2TB SSD's (Samsung EVO850's) which has dropped the read/load speeds to 600-700 MBs, if I added a third to the RAID 0 setup I'm sure I would be back to the 1,000 MBs. Initially I had 3 x 1TB SSD's RAID 0 for sample libraries, the read speed was about 1,000 MBs, pretty quick. That aside I run a Trashcan MacPro in the studio with the Blackmagic SSD Dock & it has been a champ. So the short answer is that there's no way to get even close to the old Multidock Thunderbolt 2 speeds using the newer Multidock 10G with a 2013 Mac Pro (in fact you're bottlenecked at 75% SLOWER no matter what you try to do), so my best bet is to scour eBay, used electronics forums, and the internet for Multidock 2 Thunderbolt units.įound one on ebay that looks like the dog tried to eat it, still need to find one more.You are aware that new MacPro's are expected 2019 and will be a whole new design concept, definitely with Thunderbolt 3/USB-c ports! They will however have to once again replace the current Multidock 10G with a new model that supports Thunderbolt 3 and 4 speeds if they want to stay current-currently the Multidock 10G would still be throttled at 10Gbps even if using Thunderbolt 3 or 4 cables into a new Mac Pro (in this case the Multidock would be the bottleneck, not the Mac). I vented that it seemed ridiculous for Blackmagic to discontinue a product and replace it with one that is half as fast, but as the Thunderbolt 2 protocol was not being continued it made sense for Blackmagic to transition to USB-C format. With regard to using the 10G Multidock with the 2013 Mac Pro, the Mac only has USB 3.0 ports which are limited to 5Gbps, so even if you cable into the mac using USB 3.1 or 3.2 cables or hubs, the Mac will bottleneck you down to 5Gbps maximum speed anyway. If it's useful to anyone reading this I did get a reply directly from Blackmagic tech support about this.īasically I was correct that the Multidock 10G is limited to 10Gbps, and the older (discontinued) Multidock Thunderbolt 2 unit is twice as fast at 20 Gbps. So, how do I connect two Multidock 10G's to a Mac Pro late 2013 to achieve minimum 20Gbps speed? Specific cable/adapter path appreciated. So how do I maximize the speed here-I'm looking for at least 20 Gbps-baseline I need to at least get what I got with the older Multidock models. So you can imagine trying to load a 60GB scoring template at this jurassic speed. As a result I assume I'm getting maximum 5 Gbps-75% SLOWER than the older model Multidock 2's! And boy do I feel it. So I currently have the Multidocks speaking to the Mac Pro through USB C-to-USB A cables plugged into a USB 3.0 hub feeding to one of the Mac's USB A ports. They are different animals, so hats off to the lobotomized sadist who decided they should look identical (probably the same guy who decided mini-display port and Thunderbolt 2 should look identical years before). More simply to the point, Thunderbolt is not USB. Neither Multidock was even recognized and I learned the hard way that Thunderbolt 3, despite having the same format, is NOT USB C. ![]() I originally hoped and tried to connect the Multidocks via Apple's Thunderbolt 3 (USB C format) to Thunderbolt 2 adapter, then into the Thunderbolt ports on the Mac via standard thunderbolt 2 cables, hoping to get that sweet 20 Gbps Thunderbolt 2 speed, but no dice. ![]() Please correct me if I'm missing something glaringly obvious and advise as per below if you can!Īs you might know, the Mac Pro 2013 has 4 USB A ports and 6 Thunderbolt ports. The problems with the new Multidock 10G are that it is MUCH slower than the older thunderbolt model and cannot be daisey-chained as far as I know-a downgrade in every respect. As a result I was forced to buy 2 of the new Multidock 10G units (USB-C), and am having difficulty figuring out how to best connect them to the duplicate Mac Pro late 2013 trashcan in the second studio. Unfortunately the Multidock 2 thunderbolt was discontinued and I literally can't find it anywhere in the world, not even eBay. These work brilliantly and deliver thunderbolt 2 speeds of 20Gbps (lightning fast) with NO ADAPTERS-just one single thunderbolt cable going into just one of 6 thunderbolt Mac ports for both daisy-chained Multidocks. ![]() In my original studio I have a Mac Pro late 2013 trashcan connected to 2 daisy-chained Blackmagic Multidock 2 (thunderbolt 2) units (the older, now discontinued Multidock model). I am in the process of duplicating my rig for a second studio. TL/DR - How do I connect two Multidock 10G's to a Mac Pro late 2013 to achieve minimum 20Gbps speed? Specific cable/adapter path appreciated.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |