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At $2699, it might be expensive, but the 27-inch iMac we customized with a 3.4GHz Core i7 quad-core processor and a 256GB SSD is the fastest Mac weu2019ve tested to date.
TLDR; yes, it is possible to add an SSD to a 2011 27" iMac without going through too much hoopla. Between everyone having issues finding parts, non-workable guides (due to parts), and general ...
I'm using a fairly middle of the road 27" iMac at work - i5, 8GB, spinning HD. The machine itself is fine, but the lack of SSD is killing me. I wouldn't want to risk an internal upgrade on this ...
21.5-inch 2.7GHz Core i5 iMac with SSD (Mid 2011): Speedmark 6.5 scores Longer bars are better. Blue bars in italics represent reference systems.
My "vintage" mid 2011 iMac is my daily driver. I have upgraded the RAM to 16GB and put an SSD as primary disk while keeping the HDD as second, removing the dvd.
iFixit recommends adding a smaller, cheaper SSD and using that as your boot drive while using your HDD for media files and things of the like. Hard to go against that advice. [iFixit] ...
The iMac Mid 2011 Dual Hard Drive Kit ($69.95) is available for both the 21.5-inch and 27-inch models and comes with a Custom SATA power cable, SATA data cable, custom-cut 3M VHB double-sided ...
But as several readers have noted, there is another way to add an SSD to your Mac: you can keep your old hard drive, and instead replace the Mac’s CD/DVD optical drive, also known as a SuperDrive.
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