I recently bought a mac mini m1 (used) because I became fascinated by its silent blissful operation (my God, finally no fan noise). My mac is the base model (256Gb SSD / 8Gb RAM) which is fine for my slow piano playing and low number of used mics (my synchron CFX and D274 custom presets have only 2 or 3 mics). On my windows laptop the VSL readouts of scan speed were the same (620 MB/s) when the libraries are installed in the internal SSD or on a cheap 480Gb external SSD and I honestly don't hear any difference in performance (but again, my fingers are far from able to push the system to the limit...). For this reason I thought that only 256Gb of internal SSD would make no difference since I could easily expand the storage space using a large external SSD.
Lo and behold, I found that the readouts from APFS formated external SSDs are dramatically lower than on windows. I bought a large Crucial X6 external drive and VSL reports a scan speed of ~130MB/s. My old SSD that in windows had scan speeds of 620MB/s (readout of the VSL synchron piano player), dropped to 115MB/s after I formatted it to APFS.
Is this difference in scan speed really accurate, or am I overthinking it? I think that to reach 600 MB/s readouts like I am used to in windows, I need to buy a thunderbolt 4 external SSD, which is almost as expensive as the mac mini. On the other hand, if the VSL scan speed is not really accurate and only indicative, maybe the speeds are reported differently but the actual real-life performance is not that different in NTFS vs APFS SSDs. From my quick testing using MIDI files played with many mics, I feel that the Crucial X6 is working fine despite the low 130MB/s scans, but if I know that this may be a limitation in the future, I rather return it now and get a true thunderbolt 4 external SSD.
Any thoughts on this?