Might have been me who you’re thinking of. I did this a few years ago - even 
over usb it is so much faster, isn’t it! Glad you got it going...

Thanks,

     -Jason

----------------------------------
Sent from my iPhone
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On 26 Oct 2019 at 11:12:14 BST, 'Tony Crooks' via Sussex Mac User Group 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 Hi,
   I probably made a mistake buying a refurb 2014 model 1.4GHz Mac mini earlier 
in the year but its predecessor, a 2011 model, was worrying me with persistent 
overheating, fans continuously at full blast. Plus I didn’t fancy spending a 
lot of money on what is essentially a home server sitting under our main TV 
which is used as the monitor for when we need family FaceTime, etc.
 
The 1.4GHz mimi is as slow as molasses and I know I could have dismantled it to 
insert an SSD but I’m done with this from experience with its predecessor. But 
the grindingly slow performance increasingly irritated me.
 
Not so long ago I read about someone using an external SSD as a boot drive and 
intrigued I looked up the latest prices. Actually quite cheap, about £85 for a 
500GB external SSD. Having read around this some more, noting such issues as 
needing to reformat the drive, and the apparent inability to format a USB drive 
as an APFS - not true - but not obvious with Apple’s Disk Utility, I plumped 
for a  960GB  external SSD from  Integral , which cost me just under £100.
 
A dinky credit card sized object with a very, very short USB3 cable and not at 
the bleeding edge of SSD performance. Actually setting it up for APFS and then 
cloning my system disk was very straightforward. And, wow, 1.4GHz mini 
performance transformed. Apps in the Dock open with one bounce. Web pages load 
very rapidly. FaceTime stability much improved (although what that has to do 
with disk performance I’m not sure). Just what I’d hoped for.
 
I installed the Blackmagic Disk Speed Test app to see what read/write speeds 
were being achieved. Both in the  380MB  per sec area - quite some improvement 
over the tardy performance of the 5400rpm hard disk Apple sticks in the mini.
 
According to Integral the life of the SSD is estimated to be 10 years of 
general use - probably enough for this system.
 
So, if you have a Mac with USB3, or better, ports and no internal SSD, or do 
not want to take apart your system then an external SSD could give your system 
a bit of a boost.    -- 
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