Ryan Coleman
Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2023
I've opened a ticket with HPT about this but the system powers up and provides power to my MBP but it does not activate or mount the NVMe RAID any longer.This is a problem -- I have 2TB of data stuck on the RAID in there that I need to get out -- I will likely have to remove the PCIe RAID device and put it into an Intel MacPro I have lying around... hopefully I can load the drivers there for it... but I'm not holding my breath.Right now this device is holding about $10,000 hostage.
Gerard Nicol
Reviewed in Australia on February 18, 2022
I purchased one of these to so I could use a LTO tape drive with my Intel NUC.Pros: cheaper that the rest and works.Cons: the PCIe slot is smaller than most cards with an open end. At first it thought there was no chance this thing would take my card.Fans are a little rattly and build quality is about 70% of what you’d like. I’d be happy to pay $50 more to get better quality (but all products on the market like this get the same critical reviews on quality).But the biggest problem is if you’re unfamiliar with how Thunderbolt interacts with windows security.When you plug the device in Windows pops up a message asking if you approve the device. But even when you say yes it doesn’t work.I had already started an Amazon return when I decided to take another look. Device manager has a Cisco driver with an arrow icon on it. I opened the properties and saw that it was disabled.After enabling the driver up popped my SCSI adapter and then my LTO tape drive.$300 for this, $100 for a SCSI card and $500 for a Dell external LTO5 drive and for $30 a tape I can mount an LTFS drive and drag and drop files to tape at high speed.Would buy again.
CVH
Reviewed in Japan on March 9, 2021
GTX1050Tiを取り付けて使いました。 Thunderbolt3付のノートパソコンに買い替えた際に、Akitio Nodeを買ってGTX1660Superを取り付けて使ってみたら、予想以上に快適で驚きました。 性能面では満足していたこの組み合わせですが、人の欲は深いもので持ち運びが出来るeGPUが欲しくなり、本機を購入しました。 12V10Aの電源を付けて使ったところ、上記のベンチマーク結果が得られました。 取り付けの際にビデオカードのファンは取り外しましたが、本機内蔵のファンで100%の性能発揮時にも十分な冷却が出来ていました。 この運用では75W級のGTX1050TiやGTX1650補助電源無ししか使えそうにありませんが、リュックサックにノートパソコンと一緒に入るサイズでTiger Lakeを除く内蔵GPUを大幅に上回るグラフィック性能を得られるので重宝しそうです。追記Elsaの1スロット型GPUが手に入ったので其方で改めてテストしました。1080p以下・標準品質でFF15を動作させる必要ラインはクリアしているようです。
Customer
Reviewed in Japan on March 20, 2021
4枚もSSDが搭載できるしスピードも速いので助かっています。他の製品だとSSD一枚しか載せないとPCI-eの帯域がx1しか使われないものも多いですがこの製品は専用のチップでうまく帯域を使ってくれます。専用ドライバをインストールするとMacだとスリープ時にカーネルパニックを起こすのでスリープを切らなきゃいけないのが惜しいです。もちろんこれはMac側が原因の可能性もあります。
--Jeff--
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2020
The chassis with no cards in it requires no drivers to be recognized by macOS Catalina. Runs quiet, but not silent as it has two 40mm fans. Solid construction and uncomplicated.Running macOS Catalina version 10.15.6 via on a Micron 9300 MAX 6.4TB U.2 SSD on my my iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2017) 3.4 GHz Quad-Core Intel Core i5, via the Highpoint RocketStor 6661A Thunderbolt 3 to PCIe 3.0 X16 Expansion Chassis and a StarTech.com U.2 to PCIe Adapter - x4 PCIe - For 2.5" U.2 NVMe SSD - SFF-8639 PCIe Adapter - U.2 SSD - PCIe SSD - U.2 drive (PEX4SFF8639).
Matthew Joordens
Reviewed in Australia on September 13, 2020
I got the product to use a Vive HTC headset wirelessly. That requires a PCIe board. This product did not allow me to connect the device through the thunderbolt 3. A have got another brand now that works fine.
gddr
Reviewed in Japan on August 11, 2020
Not x16 PCIE as advertised, its x4 slot. Bad design, no power switch for on/off.Slim size, (almost) silent operation are its good points.
Jorge EvanstonChi
Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2019
Setup:* 27" iMac 5k with TB2 ports.* HighPoint RocketStor 6661A* Third party PCIe to NVME adapter* Generic 1TB NVME & SSD in a USB 3.0 case (for APFS Fusion)Some Pros: Quiet or the fans don't work. Solid build. Easy to get into the device. Discreet. No crazy vibrations. (I don't like fan or drive vibrations)Cons: No On/Off switch. These devices (external chassis) still have a low adoption and the information out there only focuses on graphics. The one that did focus on NVME did not cover this information.Now for the TL;DR user experience:I wanted to future proof myself with a Thunderbolt 3 expansion to use with my 27" iMac 5k (late 2015). I was very nervous at first since the device had poor reviews. I've had it for 2 weeks now and it's had there has been a fair share of issues but I wouldn't say all of them are Highpoint's fault.I used the Apple TB3 (USB-C) to TB2 adapter to get this to work on my iMac with TB2. I placed a Vantec PCIe card in the enclosure and used a generic 256GB Inland Professional NVME I took out of my Windows box. At this point, I had a secondary SSD in a TB2 dock form a different Vendor. My first step was to even see if macOS saw the device. When I first turned it on, it did not recognize or power up. I was starting to get nervous. For some reason it did not like the Apple TB2 cable. I swapped it out with a 3rd party TB2 cable that I previously purchased. Voila. There's the device.I reformatted macOS and set it up to use the combined 480GB OCZ SSD w/ 256Gb Inland NVME. This setup worked like a charm but it had issues returning from sleep. This is apparently a known issue on a lot of devices. It's not just Highpoint. I got around this by turning off certain power settings such as auto shutoff, standby, and hibernation modes using pmset. Now It was working brilliantly. However, the NVME was only 256GB and I wanted more...I decided to take the TB2 dock back and buy a 1TB NVME instead. The original OCZ 470GB SSD was using USB 3.0 and I wanted to try the TB2 dock. I couldn't afford both the dock and the enclosure though. Now to get macOS on a new APFS Fusion drive using the 1TB NVME plus the OCZ SSD (now in a USB 3.0 enclosure). That's when all the troubles started.The fusion was created automatically and set the 1TB to the "main" device and the 480GB to the "Secondary (Aux" device. (Personally I wish APFS could span drives or use JBOD similar to Windows Storage Spaces. Right now it defaults to Fusion.) Over the next few days, I would have to unplug the Highpoint, cross my fingers, and hope I could option boot and see the drive during selection. Otherwise I'd get the folder with the blinking question mark or have to reset PRAM.Being an old timer Mac guy, I remembered that Macs would scan ports in a specific order during boot time. This apparently never changed from the old SCSI days. I started wondering if the Thunderbolt is last on the chain. I checked disk utility and found the synthesized APFS fusion drive was showing up as USB. Below that was the container and volume. Each were showing up as PCIe. I knew that had to be an issue. Apparently, it was scanning the USB device first before getting to the TB3 device and that in turn led to the question mark. It couldn't find the system on the USB device because the system resided on the NVME. I reformatted and reinstalled but it always showed up the same.You are probably wondering why even set it up that way. Well even with TB2, NVME, and a USB SSD, I was getting ~1200MB/s write and ~1400MB/s read. Together they made up 1.5TB of solid state love. That's a lot of space. What can I say? I am a glutton for space (punishment).Unfortunately, I had to redo the whole installation and manually create the APFS fusion drive so that the slower 480GB SSD was the "main" device and the 1TB NVME was the secondary (Aux) device. Voila! Now it boots up fine. It still doesn't respond to sleep well. That's a known issue though. It's not just Highpoint and I *did* use a generic NVME. (Inland Premium without firmware patches)Is it fast? Not as fast as the original setup but that's only when benchmarking. It's fast when booting up. When starting apps, I get about one bounce. Sometimes no bounce. So yeah. That's fast. Plus maybe it's better to have the secondary drive this way to prevent overall wear on that drive.I will report back in about a month. Fingers crossed.
Constantin
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2018
This is a review for the bare case to which you can add a PCIe card of your choice. For example, I use it for my Myricom SFP+ 10GbE network adapter. In order for a PCIe-card of your choice to work, it needs to be Thunderbolt-aware and not draw more than about 45W. The two internal fans keep the card cool (many competing products only use one fan) and the case is spacious enough to accept cards up to 8.2" long @ full height. The case is solid extruded Aluminum, clear-coated to a finish similar to the 2010-era Power Macs.There is one open standard PCIe slot (x4 3.0) and enough room between the slot and the thunderbolt interface to accommodate a pretty wide variety of cards. This means you can attach cards that have more PCIe lanes (x8 or x16, for example) but the cards will only function at x4 speeds, which is allegedly good for 4GB/s raw throughput. Many folk are happy at those speeds with current eGPUs and that's about 3x what my network card can theoretically handle.I would not attempt a eGPU rig with this unit unless you're willing to either tone down the power needs significantly and/or make significant modifications. For example, the OEM power supply is only good for about 60W (12VDC @ 5A), which isn't going to get you very far. Similarly, while the OEM cooling will work just fine for a network card, SAS controller, etc., I doubt it will suffice for a graphics rig under intense load.It would be great if Highpoint allowed the customer to easily mount this case horizontally. The fans are also little buzzy and hence I may elect to replace them with Noctua models in the future. Thankfully, there are standard pin headers for the the fans on the inside, so the swap is easy.Compared to competing products, this case is longer, narrower, and less expensive.EDIT on Nov. 9, 2018:Too bad. As of today, the unit is no longer functioning. The lights come on, the fans start spinning, then the power cuts and the cycle repeats. I doubt it's the external power supply (which was easy to test, but then again, it wasn't under load). I've contacted Highpoint to get a replacement / repair. However, less than a months worth of occasional use shouldn't cause a unit to fail.After some back and forth, a RMA was authorized, I sent in my unit in, and eventually a replacement was sent to me. The replacement has been working fine since.By now there are better options re network adapters than combining this enclosure with a PCIe card. However, it’s a workable solution and I really like how the unit only comes on whenever it is plugged into a active thunderbolt bus.