Your data. Your choice.

We use cookies and similar technologies to provide you with the best shopping experience as well as for marketing purposes. Please accept, decline or manage the use of your information.

OWC Thunderbay 4 mini (2.5")
EUR449,–

OWC Thunderbay 4 mini

2.5"


Question about OWC Thunderbay 4 mini

avatar
Anonymous

3 years ago

how do i connect the device to my laptop with usb port? and can the device also be operated sensibly with linux ubuntu?

Avatar
avatar
robochud

2 years ago

In Debian 11 with an Intel® NUC 11 Pro Kit NUC11TNKv7 (with Thunderbolt), the 4 4TB SSDs are all displayed individually.

avatar
Anonymous

3 years ago

The unit must be connected to a PC with a Thunderbolt port.
I am using the device on an older Mac with Thunderbolt 2: with a Thunderbolt 2 to Thunderbolt 3 adapter, I can access the Thunderbay without any problem. On the USB-A port of the same Mac, with a USB-A to USB-C cable, I cannot access the Thunderbay. I assume that the same applies to a Windows or Linux PC. (Tested with a Windows PC, connected to the USB-A port: Windows 10 does indeed recognise a connected device, but requires it to be connected to a Thunderbolt port).
Regarding Linux: one advantage of the OWC Thunderbay is that the device comes with a licence for SoftRaid. SoftRaid is only available for Windows and Mac, not for Linux. The Thunderbay itself does not contain a RAID controller. Therefore, either the disks must be addressed individually (without RAID), or a software RAID solution for Linux must be used. There seems to be some, but I have no experience in this.

avatar
kraftolino

3 years ago

I can't answer the questions, but I wonder why you want an (expensive) Thunderbolt peripheral if your computer doesn't have Thunderbolt?

avatar
Anonymous

3 years ago

It is an enclosure with Thunderbolt port, from the description: "... has two Thunderbolt 3 ports". Therefore, it can only be operated on devices with a Thunderbolt interface, USB does not work.