

Other than that, the specs don’t seem much different than it’s predecessor. This is a nice feature, but filling an SSD really slows it down, especially since your SATA I interface doesn't support TRIM, which means the drive can't perform "clean up" while it's idle.The 15″ MacBook Pro became Apple’s first notebook computer with LED backlighting when it was introduced on June 5, 2007.

If you do the multi-drive game, put your spinning disk in the opti-bay.Īlso, you'll probably want to disable safe sleep (writes the contents of memory to the drive each time you sleep, which means losing thousands of write cycles of SSD life over time for essentially no benefit)Īnd local Time Machine backups (uses the empty space on your drive for Time Machine because you're mobile so you have some of it to take with you). The performance still blows away my spinning disk. I mean to swap the drive locations, hopefully resolve the instability, and also eek out the additional performance benefit (SATA I is 150 MBps, PATA maxes at 133, which means my 500 MBps SATA III drive must hate me. I have occasional hangs and I'm not sure if the multi-conversion process is to blame. That means I took a SATA III drive, connected it to a SATA I controller running through a PATA adaptor to connect to my system. So, the Optical Bay on my 2007 MBP is PATA, listed as ATA on System Information. I made the mistake of putting a SATA III drive in the optibay on a 2007 MBP and leaving the spinning disk where it was. Sorry for the noob-ish post, but any help would be greatly appreciated. I'm really just curious to see if anyone who has done this themselves has any advice, or could share some resources that were helpful for them.


I've read a little, and not been totally clear on something along the lines of the older MacBook models not being able to fully utilize the speed of SATA III on the new SSDs, or something along those lines. From what I gather, I need an adapter (optibay) in order to install the hdd in place of the optical drive. I replaced the original hard drive once without any problem, so I'm familiar with that portion. I've read the threads on here about this operation, and done plenty of research elsewhere online, but am still not 100% clear on the whole process. I've decided to go the route of upgrading with a SSD, as well as swapping out my optical drive for the western digital hdd, which is still under warranty and will be replaced. My mid 2007 MBP had been running exceptionally slow as of late, which I discovered was due to a hard drive failure.
