Expert's Rating
Pros
- Performance compares very well with the competition
- Sturdy design
Cons
- Thunderbolt only
Our Verdict
The Envoy Pro SX is Thunderbolt storage for your Mac that performs very well. However, it’s Thunderbolt only, and its Thunderbolt/USB-capable sibling, the Envoy Pro FX, is only $20 more than the SX.
Price When Reviewed
$199 (240GB); $249 (480GB); $349 (1TB); $529 (2TB)
Best Prices Today: OWC Envoy Pro SX
OWC’s new Envoy Pro SX Thunderbolt external drive delivers the speed of its Envoy Pro FX sibling, but for less cash. It features the same internal SSD, as well as the same rugged, IP67-rated dust and water-resistant enclosure, thoughj lacks its brethren’s USB 3 compatibility.
The Envoy Pro SX features a good-looking, all-metal, charcoal gray enclosure. However, at approximately 4.5-inches long, 2.75-inches wide, 0.6-inches thick, and 8.6 ounces, the SX is no dainty little thing. However, the heft bespeaks quality, and the non-skid runners on the bottom keep the Envoy Pro SX from sliding about.
The metal case also sheds heat very well. It was barely warm to the touch after our test suite was finished. The only items breaking up the countenance are a Type-C port o one end of the drive (with the Thunderbolt Logo), and on the other end a thin (and rather dim) power/activity LED.
OWC
Four different capacities grace the SX series: 240GB for $199, 480GB for $249, 1TB for $349, and 2TB for $529. Those prices reflect a $20 saving over the FX. Yup, only $20. That’s kind of surprising when you lose the FX’s USB compatibility.
Performance
The SX features the same Aura Pro 12 NVMe SSD as the FX, so it’s the bridge chip (NVMe to Thunderbolt) that’s likely a bit different from the FX. It doesn’t support USB, so make that quite a bit different.
The Envoy Pro SX came formatted to exFAT, but performed much better when formatted to AFPS as this run of BlackMagicDesign’s Disk Speed shows. This was measured on an M1 24-inch iMac. The FX was tested on an M1 Mac mini.
IDG
As you can see above, the Envoy Pro SX seems a faster reader than writer, though 1.5GBps writing is still quite fast for an external drive. Oddly, despite the same NVMe SSD inside, Disk Speed measured the FX at 2243MBps writing and 1832MBps reading. The FX was tested on a 16GB M1 Mac mini, and the SX on an 8GB M1 24-inch iMac, so we took those results with several grains of salt, running more tests on sister publication PCWorld’s testbed using Windows-based benchmarks.
On the PCW testbed, the Envoy Pro SX proved a hair faster than the FX in synthetic benchmarks such as CrystalDiskMark 6, though the difference is so small as to be almost irrelevant.
The Envoy Pro SX was ever so slightly faster than its FX sibling in CrystalDiskMark 6 but by so slim a margin as to be a largely meaningless comparison.
IDG
The SX was slower than the FX in two of our 48GB transfer tests, and slower when all the times were totaled, however, the difference is again minor. Connect the Envoy Pro SX, Envoy Pro SX, or Samsung X5 to your Thunderbolt port and you’d never notice a difference without a stopwatch.
The Envoy Pro SX did quite well on our 48GB transfer tests, beating the FX on two, and losing on two. The difference is marginal at best, and subjectively unnoticeable.
IDG
I’m throwing out the Disk Speed results and saying the FX and SX are virtually identical in performance. The fact that I’ve seen aberrant Disk Speed results on M1 Macs before makes me confident in that analysis.
Bottom line
The Envoy Pro SX is top-notch Thunderbolt storage for your Mac or suitably equipped PC. However, the Envoy Pro FX is only $20 more than the SX. I don’t know about you, but if I’m spending beaucoup money already, a couple of sawbucks more for far greater compatibility wouldn’t faze me in the least.
This article was edited on July 12th, 2023 for syntax and style. At this time the Samsung X5 was no longer available for purchase.