Orico 20Plus MagPro iPhone SSD review: Good hardware, iOS Files app is still terrible

Orico 20Plus MagPro iPhone SSD review: Good hardware, iOS Files app is still terrible
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Orico 20Plus MagPro iPhone SSD review: Good hardware, iOS Files app is still terrible
Author: news@appleinsider.com (Mike Wuerthele)
Published: Jan, 31 2025 18:59

Orico 20Plus MagPro iPhone SSD review: Mounted to the back of an iPhone. The Orico 20Plus MagPro Magnetic iPhone Portable SSD is a speedy-enough SSD for your iPhone, that is let down by the incredibly sorry state of Apple's Files app. Apple's had external drive support on the Mac forever, and it's been added to the iPhone relatively recently. It can be awkward, though, to run a cable to a drive and conveniently use the drive while shooting video.

While it doesn't carry data, the MagSafe ring on the back of iPhones made for the last four years offers an interesting solution. If designed properly, an SSD enclosure can just attach back there, and a short cable run can make it accessible to the iPhone. The Orico 20Plus is one such drive. Orico sells the 20Plus MagPro in three capacity options, starting at 512GB and rising to 1TB and 2TB. I'm testing the 1TB version of the drive.

As the name explains, it's a small drive that attaches to the back of an iPhone using the built-in MagSafe wireless charging magnets. The intention is that it can be put in place, hooked up, and be available to record media externally, without getting too much in the way. Measuring 2.9 inches by 2.6 inches and 0.47 inches thick, it neatly fits on the back of all current-generation iPhones without going over the edges. The rounded top and sides make the case reasonably easy to hold onto while gripping the iPhone.

You have a choice of Blue or Silver color, with the latter more likely to fit in with most iPhone colors and cases. And, if you want to slap this on the back of your MacBook screen, it comes with a magnetic ring to make that happen. No more sticky velcro. I don't have any complaints about the fit and finish. I'd prefer a metal case simply for thermals, but the Orico 20Plus gets the job done. At the base is a single USB-C port, used with the accompanying six-inch flat USB-C cable that comfortably reaches the iPhone's port.

Orico claims it is capable of up to 20Gbps of throughput at a maximum. And, it does, assuming you have a Windows computer with USB 3.2 2x2 support. However, it is careful to point out that it can only reach a maximum speed of 10Gbps on the Pro models of iPhone due to what it calls "interface protocol limitations." This is true on the Mac also, because of what Apple has chosen to implement in its Thunderbolt controller.

Regardless, While limited to 10Gbps, there's still more than enough bandwidth available to use it for external video recording via the camera app. Our testing bore this 10 gigabit speed out on Mac, and in our testing, the choke-point is the 10 gigabit per second USB-C connection, and not the media or the RAM cache on the drive. Simple enough. You're best served on the Mac with a full Thunderbolt drive. Get at least 3 gigabytes per second out of it read and write, and you're good to go.

The iPhone is a bit less demanding on this front. The main offender why is how the iPhone handles external storage. After all these years, the Files app is still garbage. And, there's no universal compatibility with it. Outside of videography, any given app needs to be specifically interoperable with Files to use this drive. For instance, my favorite third-party PDF reader supports Files, but requires import into the app's data storage, killing the ability to use the drive as a massive book repository. My favorite comic book reader app does not support Files at all.

And, import speeds to the iPhone or iPad can be glacial. This doesn't appear to be the fault of developers or any given external drive and has more to do with how iOS and iPadOS handle and transfer files. This all sounds incredibly negative, and it is. But, none of it is a strike against the Orico 20Plus and more about Apple's still half-assed Files app on iPhone and iPad. I think this is a great and innovative SSD for iPhone, especially if you're doing any kind of high-resolution videography. There are better, faster, and cheaper options for Mac, though, and there's no real reason to get it for the iPad.

Line up your use case for how Apple wants you to use external drives on the iPhone, and you're good to go. Go outside that at your own peril. The Orico 20Plus MagPro Magnetic iPhone Portable SSD is available through Amazon. At review time, the 1TB version we reviewed sells for $109.99. After his exit from the Navy in 1999, Mike spent 11 years as a tech analyst, and supported a large swathe of Apple customers in the Washington DC area. With over two decades on the Apple beat, Mike has served as Apple...

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