NEWS
Apple Fixes 2023 Mac Pro Hard Drive Issue in macOS Ventura 13.5
1125
2023-07-25
Posted by 3uTools

In a support document published last month, Apple said certain SATA hard drives might unexpectedly disconnect from the 2023 Mac Pro after the computer wakes from sleep. Apple said it was aware of the issue and would fix it in a future macOS update, and the company followed through on that promise today.

Apple Fixes 2023 Mac Pro Hard Drive Issue in macOS Ventura 13.5


Apple updated the support document today to indicate that the issue has been resolved in the macOS Ventura 13.5 update released today, so users simply need to update their Mac. The issue will also likely be resolved in the macOS Sonoma beta.


While the Mac Pro is configured with SSD storage, it has SATA ports for connecting internal hard drives, and sometimes the drives could disconnect due to a bug.


"Certain models of internal SATA drives might unexpectedly disconnect from your computer after your Mac wakes from sleep," said Apple. "This can occur if your Mac automatically goes to sleep or if you manually put your Mac to sleep. If you see a message that your disk was not ejected properly, you can restart your Mac to reconnect to the drive.


Unveiled at WWDC last month, the new Mac Pro features Apple's M2 Ultra chip. The desktop tower has the same design as the Intel-based model from 2019, but lacks graphics card support and user-upgradeable RAM due to Apple silicon's unified architecture. Customers who do not need PCIe expansion should consider the Mac Studio instead.


Source: Macrumors

Related Articles
Apple Mac Pro & iMac Pro Running Intel’s New Core i9-7900x Spotted On Geekbench This Is Apple's Insanely Powerful New iMac Pro iFixit Teardown of iMac Pro Lends A Nuanced Look Inside the Powerful All-in-one Crazy prices on eBay for iMac Pro Accessories: Magic Mouse, Trackpad and Keyboar Transfer Speeds on Mac Pro for Full USB 3.1 Data? MacOS 10.12.3 Beta New Feature Extending Battery Life iMac 2017: Assumptions Divided on VR Support and Processor Apple Refuses to Fix iMac Pro Damaged in YouTube Teardown