Mike G
Well-known member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2022
- Threads
- 23
- Messages
- 1,316
- Reaction score
- 1,764
- Location
- N. AL, USA
- Vehicles
- 2022 F-150 Lightning, 2023(J1) Mach-E GT-PE
- Thread starter
- #976
One crucial tip I received from another member regarding the use of an NVMe SSD in an enclosure (mine didn't work initially), was that you need to make sure the drive's partition is of the 'MBR' type for the vehicle to recognize it ...not the newer 'GPT' type of partition. Windows recognizes an actual USB thumb drive and the partition will automatically be created as MBR normally. But Windows might create a partition on a SSD drive as if it was a fixed drive in use on your computer and those are usually GPT. The vehicle doesn't recognize GPT partitioned drives.For those of us who haven't been made aware of this update speed-up trick... if / when FDRS prompts us to insert a USB, it really helps to substitute a relatively cheap yet always always wayyy faster portable SSD with a USB dongle, for that USB. FDRS won't ever notice... but you'll definitely notice the increased download and write speeds.
SSD download and read / write speeds are always much faster than any currently available USB, and of course an SSD will not choke on the size of a download.
I use an Ethernet cable between my FIOS modem and the laptop in the car for extra speed in such "6 GB" downloading updates. Two+ years and three (at least) Synch version updates and other big updates to the IPMA, etc. on the Mach E prepared me for these Lightning updates he hee... hope this is helpful to someone out there.
If you're not sure what partition format your SSD is using, you can browse on over to here to find out how to find out, and get it sorted if it's not MBR.
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