![trim enabler for 10.6.8 trim enabler for 10.6.8](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/52/97/2d/52972d3c95d64a5dcd8a63524429a97e.jpg)
- #Trim enabler for 10.6.8 update
- #Trim enabler for 10.6.8 driver
- #Trim enabler for 10.6.8 Patch
- #Trim enabler for 10.6.8 pro
Is there a more suitable freeware check around? Kind regards, JP. Never above 180MB/sec while a dd reaches 260 MB/sec. Maybe someone can crosscheck? Xbench gives funny results anyways. I wounder if this is related to the old firmware on the drive (1.0). Rm takes milliseconds while read/write was the same.
#Trim enabler for 10.6.8 driver
After restoring the original driver things are back to normal.
Oa 500 MB test file was taking appr 10 seconds. However, I did get a weird “halting” issue (pause for 3-20 seconds) every once in a while (week or so) perhaps with TRIM enabled, this will go away haven’t seen it crop up since enabling TRIM, but it was not a common occurrence anyway. I think lots of SSD chipsets like Samsung’s and the Sandforce chipset already have native garbage collection, so TRIM (which is just OS driven GC) doesn’t really help speeds.
![trim enabler for 10.6.8 trim enabler for 10.6.8](https://d13z1xw8270sfc.cloudfront.net/origin/146110/blackedgingstrip14x85writing.jpg)
Everything went fine (did superduper before, and also used TRIM enabler’s backup feature). I did this with a MBP 2010 13″ and Vertex2 60GB. It appears the Agility 2 has garbage collection anyway. Since running the tool didn’t seem to help (and may have made things worse), I’d rather avoid the voodoo of enabling a feature Apple intentionally left out. Here are my XBench results (best of 2 runs after a reboot): 220.62 – initial reboot of my stock system 246.93 – upgraded my OCZ firmware from 1.20 - 1.32 (latest) 242.97 – ran TRIM tool 1.1 (latest as of 3/29 12 AM PST) 232.71 – after zeroing free space 233.94 – after running terminal commands 234.51 – after removing TRIM tool It looks like zeroing free space caused performance to degrade, and as you can see, running the terminal commands after that didn’t help.
#Trim enabler for 10.6.8 pro
Thanks Oskar!! Have a Late 2008 15″ Unibody Macbook Pro with a 120 GB OCZ Agility 2 SSD. Stats from Xbench show exact figures experienced when i tested the disk out of the box (and after a firmware update) i.e my disk is back to its former glory of snappy boot times and application loads. System profiler also says that TRIM is enabled.
#Trim enabler for 10.6.8 update
Just thought i’d mention this to anyone who was in my position when considering this update I just ran this prior to an ‘erase free space’ command on my 2010 2.4GHz 13″ MBP with an intel x25-v installed in the optical drive bay with no problems.
#Trim enabler for 10.6.8 Patch
Does anyone measured performance before and after the patch that shows the positive change? Please be advised before applying this patch.
![trim enabler for 10.6.8 trim enabler for 10.6.8](https://www.tilerite.co.uk/images/product/TRI858-2.jpg)
I tested the performance before and after the patch and found out that it actually degrades performance a lot. TRIM: YES is not an indication of whether it actually boosts performance. I’d like to issue a warning to all early-adopters of possible performance degradation with this fix until Restore functionality is added to this hack. Fortunately I restored from a SuperDuper backup, and everything’s back to normal. Restarted, and it ran for about three minutes before “mdworker” went mad - 80% CPU, 90% CPU, 100% CPU whole computer beachballed again. Then the fans came on and everything beachballed. It initially seemed to work, and the computer ran fine for a couple hours. Lesson learned: I should have waited for the release of the TRIM installer/enabled with the “Restore” function. It not only increases data writing speeds, but it increases the lifetime of the SSD itself. Trim is must-have feature for most Solid State Drives. #YosemiteBeta #TrimEnabler 3 essential with any installed SSD works. LOL I love my Macbook Pro Mid 2012:D SSD Fusiondrive with #trimenabler on OS X. I installed it on my late-2008 unibody MacBook, with OWC Mercury Extreme Pro SSD 256GB (revision 310A13F0). Could you please release a version to disable the patch? Any help would be greatly appreciated. FYI, I was using OCZ Vertex Agility 2 Firmware v1.11. I used XBench to test the performance before the patch and after the patch and the performance has decreased considerably compared to the original state after the patch. Although I was able to successfully enable TRIM support for my OCZ Vertex Agility 2 256GB SSD, the performance has degraded a lot.