NEW 922-8601 Apple RAID Card Battery for Mac Pro (Mid 2012), Mac Pro (Mid 2010) $145.00. 3 new & refurbished from $99.00. Silicon Image SteelVine SBA312406001 4-Port eSATA RAID Card for Apple Mac Pro/G5. See similar items. Results Pagination - Page 1. 1; 2; 3; Side Refine Panel. Underneath the pretty aluminium box, Apple's RAID Card batteries are just bog-standard lithium polymer cells with some control gear. When they fail after a year or two in service you can bet the £££ you'll fork out to replace it that the cell isn't dead, but instead has got itself into a stuck state where the RAID card is confused about what to do with it.
I recently got my hands on an Apple RAID PCI card. This time not to take apart and mess around with but simply to test and see how it works as I never had a chance to do so. I’ve worked on systems with the card built-in and in operation but the RAID’s were working so all I could really do was stare at it for a minute and move on. With 512MB cache and a 72 hour cache battery backup occupying just a single slot, this card is not just good looking, it sported some pretty good specs for a RAID card in that day. For testing I used an entry level Early 2009 Mac Pro with single 2.66GHz 4-core CPU and 16GB RAM, running macOS 10.12.5 Sierra. My question; is this card useful in 2017?
Mac Pro is designed for pros who need to build high‑bandwidth capabilities into their systems. With four double‑wide slots, three single‑wide slots, and one half‑length slot preconfigured with the Apple I/O card, it has twice as many slots as the previous Mac tower.
The card was untested when I asked to borrow it (SellYourMac.com was awesome enough to let me have this card for a bit, even though they know I tend to break things just so I can figure out how to make it work again) so I didn’t know what to expect when I received it.
I had never given it any thought but the first thing I asked myself was “where do I connect the drives?”, assuming I’d have to take the existing SATA cable out of the Mac so there would be space for cables to run from the drives to the card. Alas there isn’t a single connection on the card to run cables to anything. Huh? I looked for a special connection on the board that maybe this card would slot into when seated in the PCI slot but did not find that either. What I did notice was the top PCI slot not only had the amount of lanes available printed below it but also “RAID”.
I had noticed this in the past and figured it was there to ensure some doofus wouldn’t put the card in another slot further away from the hard drives. Routing all those cables around the other PCI cards would be a mess! Well I was wrong. PCI slot 4 is specifically for the RAID card, it won’t work in any other slot (I tried).
Of course, Apple wired all that stuff up in the board itself. Neat solution.
With the card in place and 3x1TB drives installed, time to see what this card is all about. Disk Utility immediately identified the hard drives as belonging to the RAID card but setting up the RAID is done through RAID Utility. In my case I had only two RAID types to choose from and since RAID 5 is not what I’m after (noone should be at this point), RAID 0 remains.
Creating a RAID set and subsequently a RAID volume takes a good 30 minutes. No idea why it has to take that long but I hear it’s on the low end so I got lucky. The end result is a 3TB volume with a nifty little icon assigned by macOS. Time for a performance test! Using the free AJA System Test Lite I selected the volume and ran the test, a 1GB file written to the volume and then read back.
Ouch, that can’t be right! It’s certainly faster than a single internal hard drive but not worth the $700 this card cost when it was still being sold. A look at RAID Utility quickly showed the cause, the battery on the card was still being calibrated. Depending on how long this card had been on the shelf, this could take up to 12 hours. Without the battery there is no write cache but luckily the cache can be forced on with the click of a button. The risk being that a power interruption will corrupt data that’s being written to the RAID. With the write cache enabled I ran the test again.
That’s more like it! Under ideal conditions an internal HDD (standard 7200rpm) on a Mac Pro will give you 120MB/sec write and 150MB/sec read speeds on average, usually much lower depending on fragmentation, how full the drive is and if the system itself runs off that drive as well. Merging three of these drives together gave me almost triple the ideal speeds.
But why would this expensive card be a justified purchase if I can just create a RAID 0 with Disk Utility or SoftRAID? The battery is nice but anyone that values their data, on a RAID or otherwise, will have their Mac connected to a battery backup anyway. Apparently the hardware card takes some pressure off of the CPU during read/write operations to the RAID. This might be a big deal when Terabytes of data are flowing in and out of the volume all day every day but whatever test I threw at it showed no additional pressure on the CPU. I guess this card provides a higher and more consistent speed then? To test this, the RAID set was destroyed and the card was removed but not before receiving a warning from RAID Utility (3 hours after installing it) that unfortunately the battery had failed.
With the battery confirmed dead, the write cache disabled itself. This tanked the write speeds back to 185-195MB/sec. and RAID Utility no longer offered the button to force the cache back on. After a restart the button reappeared but the restart after that it was gone again, very inconsistent.
With the card removed I created a RAID 0 again in Disk Utility. Not only was this done in under a minute, the speeds were actually better than those I got with the RAID card installed.
After several tests the average speed bump was 13-18MB/sec for both read and write operations. And not only was this setup faster, there was no difference in CPU load even with very large data transfers. The speeds were consistent on OS X 10.11 El Capitan as well which I tested because a 2009 Mac Pro is not officially supported to run Sierra.
Things may have been different back in 2009 when this card was released. Maybe a driver that was part of the OS back then that’s since been removed or something. The OS out at the time this card was for sale was Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. So the RAID was destroyed, Mac was wiped and 10.6 was installed (and holy crap does it run fast!). After running all the updates I repeated the tests and found the same speed with the card (the one time I was able to activate the write cache) and the same speeds with the RAID set up in Disk Utility. As AJA is not available for 10.6 I had to find a utility that did work and ended up with DigiloydTools. The test used a 2GB file and ran 5 iterations with write speeds of 310-320MB/sec and read speeds of 319-322MB/sec. On par with Disk Utility’s RAID setup in the other OS versions.
If it wasn’t speed that made this RAID card the obvious choice then it must be the types of RAID it supports. Disk Utility can create a RAID in the following levels:
1. Mirrored (RAID 1)
2. Striped (RAID 0)
3. Concatenated (also called JBOD)
The RAID card can create the above plus the following:
4. RAID 0+1
5. RAID 5
With RAID 5 being a bad idea even back in 2009 and RAID 0+1 being hella expensive, these two RAID levels alone could not have been part of the sales pitch. Unfortunately after some research I can not see what the benefit of this card was over Disk Utility. Perhaps it was the two RAID levels that the card offered after all or maybe it was the monitoring and reporting RAID Utility provided which is something Disk Utility doesn’t do. The RAID will start failing and you won’t see it until you open Disk Utility yourself.
I’m all for using and repurposing old tech and was hoping I could find a good use for this card so I could keep it. Unfortunately it’s not worth it and from what I can tell, it never was. At least not for RAID 0 configurations. With more complicated RAID levels the card may have had some benefits. The issues with using this card in 2017:
1. You probably won’t find one with a battery that’s working. If you do, it won’t hold the full charge and/or will die shortly after you buy the card. A replacement battery runs anywhere from $70 to $110 and of course the replacement will be a used battery as well. Without a functional battery there’s no guarantee the write cache will work.
2. The card runs HOT. 70C (158F) and that’s just with little to no activity. This in turn heats up the hard drives that are directly on top of the card. A drive in bay 3 will feel this, a drive in bay 4 will certainly feel this.
3. The card takes up a valuable PCIe slot. To keep these Mac Pro’s useful, we mostly have to rely on PCI cards. A card for USB 3, a card for an SSD and of course the first slot was already in use by the graphics card. This leaves most Mac Pro users with 1 slot available and plenty of nice cards to put in there to enhance the performance and functionality. The RAID card provides neither.
4. Other options available. If RAID 5 or RAID 0+1 was a must have, this card would have been a good purchase. These days though, and shortly after the RAID card was released, the feature rich SoftRAID offered all the same RAID levels plus tons of additional features. Accelerated rebuilds, email notifications, SSD support, advanced warning and more. Since then more RAID levels were added to the feature set so it’s now many times better and more useful than Disk Utility and the RAID card. Of course external RAID systems are more versatile than using the internal bays on a Mac Pro as well and with a USB 3 or eSATA PCI card the speeds will be more than adequate.
The user base for this card was small, a fraction of the Mac Pro users got this card. When they did it was likely with 15.000rpm SAS drives or something fancy like that and a RAID level other than 0. In 2017 though, as much as I like to keep old tech around, this card is of no use. You can pick one up these days for around $30 to $40 bucks if you want to play with it and just have the experience, keep the cost of a replacement battery in mind though. It was fun to play with and I may keep this around if the price is right just to pull it apart and rebuild the battery in the future. If this happens, you’re sure to read about it here 🙂
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The Mac Pro introduced in 2019 has eight PCIe slots:
- Four double-wide slots
- Three single-wide slots
- One half-length slot preconfigured with the Apple I/O card
Mac Pro includes one or two Radeon Pro MPX Modules that occupy slots 1-2 and slots 3-4. You can choose your MPX Modules when you order your Mac Pro or order them separately from Apple. Learn how to install PCI cards in your Mac Pro (2019).
Apple AMD Radeon MPX Modules
Apple currently has four different Mac Pro Expansion (MPX) Modules that contain AMD Radeon Pro graphics processing units (GPUs). Radeon Pro MPX Modules can use slots 1-2 and slots 3-4, and you can install one or two of each module:
- Radeon Pro 580X MPX Module: one module only
- Radeon Pro W5700X MPX Module: one or two modules
- Radeon Pro W5500X MPX Module: one or two modules
- Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Module: one or two modules
- Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Module: one or two modules
You can use Radeon MPX Modules along with other third-party PCIe graphics cards. If you use Boot Camp, using a Radeon MPX Module and a third-party AMD graphics card isn't supported when your Mac is using Windows. Learn about using AMD graphics cards with Microsoft Windows on Mac Pro (2019).
Apple I/O card
Mac Pro comes with the Apple I/O card, which has two Thunderbolt 3 ports, two USB-A ports, and a 3.5mm headphone jack. The Apple I/O card comes preinstalled in slot 8 and can't be installed in another slot.
Third-party PCIe cards
You can install many different PCIe cards in your Mac Pro, such as fibre channel cards, fibre networking cards, and pro video and audio interface cards. The PCIe bus on your Mac Pro provides up to 300W auxillary power. If your PCIe card requires additional power, such as a GPU, use the Belkin Aux Power Cable.
Mac Pro supports the same GPUs that are supported by external graphics processors (eGPUs). If you use Boot Camp and want to install a NVIDIA card to use in Windows on your Mac, don't install the card in slot 2. Learn about using AMD graphics cards with Microsoft Windows on Mac Pro (2019).
Apple Raid Card For Mac Pro 15
Some older PCI cards might use 32-bit Option ROMs that aren't compatible with your Mac Pro. If you install a PCI card that uses 32-bit option ROMs, your Mac Pro might not start up correctly.
Afterburner
Afterburner is a hardware accelerator card made by Apple. Learn more about Afterburner.
RAID cards
If you want to add additional storage, you can install a third-party RAID card, such as a SAS RAID card, or you can install the Promise Pegasus R4i 32TB RAID MPX Module in one of the two MPX bays. If you use Boot Camp on your Mac, Windows doesn't support Apple software RAID volumes.