Grant Bennet-Alder>> if you like your 2010 Mac Pro
i got rid of my 2010 mac pro and cinema displays years ago for 2017 iMac and apple flash SSD -- 2017 ran mojave and cs6 photoshop and kept me in business -- 2017 ran cooler and faster with much less energy than my 2010 ever did
then i discovered 2019 iMac also ran mojave (and cs6) -- and Sequoia -- so i got rid of 2017 -- now 2019 iMac are my current machines (i still working in Mojave cs6 and Snow Leopard) -- i do not anticipate buying a new Mac for some time -- certainly not a M series silicon iMac until they get the screen issues fixed
i originally asked what type of SSD the 2013 MP took -- that was an easy answer as was the last supported macOS -- for someone spending time here and i appreciate all the help i receive here
not sure why this turned
why you say changing a SSD could harm a healthy computer -- with appropriate instruction and caution -- Apple original SSDs are available preowned off auction sites (no gloom and doom there, just ask for DriveHealth and Power On hours and use common sense)
i am not a fan of OWC SSDs and would avoid them ... their RAM yes
2013 mac pro swapping SSD is about as easy (and routine) as upgrading RAM -- it doesn't compare with cutting the screen assembly off an iMac, flipping the main board, installing a NVMe SSD, changing out the weird battery (no one sells), upgrading the RAM in 21.5" 4k models -- and putting it back together
i don't recommend non-apple upgrades or system hacks for professional use -- they never worked 100% for me and wasted my time troubleshooting conflicts -- exceptions: Microsoft 2-button scroll USB mouse, 3rd party RAM and SSD/HDD, external USB/TB3 enclosures, card readers (to name a few off top of my head)
but this is why i like computers -- everyone can develop their own approach -- this place is extremely useful for moving people forward...and getting them back to work