telliott59 wrote:
Personally I'm not liking the idea of not being able to replace the SSD (should the need arise) in my shiny new M3 iMac. If it failed then unless you shifted to a external drive your iMac is pretty much trashed.
In Apple's current lineup, I believe that only the Mac Studios and the Mac Pros have SSDs on removable modules. Because the Apple Silicon processors act as SSD controllers, those modules are not standard M.2 SSDs; the only source for them is Apple, and so if you ever have to replace them, the replacement cost will be high.
All of the other Macs have soldered-in SSDs.
Something else you should be aware of: all Macs with T2 chips or Apple Silicon processors encrypt the contents of the internal SSD in real time. If you ever separate the SSD from the T2 or Apple Silicon chip which contains the decryption key, the contents of the SSD become so much unreadable hash. (Unless, perhaps, you are the NSA or KGB and have unlimited funds and time with which to try to crack the encryption.)
This makes it REALLY important to maintain proper backups. You CANNOT count on being able to "pull the drive" out of a failed Mac as a last-ditch substitute for never having properly backed up your computer in the first place. Relying on "pulling the drive" was always a very risky thing to do (what if that drive was the part that had failed?), but now, it's pretty much guaranteed not to work even if you have a Mac Studio or a Mac Pro.