support category ssd
XS2000 SSD (SXS2000)

XS2000 Portable SSD - Soporte

Preguntas más frecuentes

No. Esta no es una unidad Thunderbolt. Es una unidad USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, con una capacidad nominal de (20Gbs) por segundo. Thunderbolt, aunque tiene una capacidad nominal de 30/40 Gbs, generalmente se maximiza a velocidades USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbs), consulte la tabla a continuación.

Compruebe las especificaciones de su dispositivo huésped.

Kingston Estándar Velocidad máxima de transferencia de datos USB
USB 1.1 12 Mbps
USB 2.0           480 Mbps
USB 3.2 Gen 1 5 Gbps
USB 3.2 Gen 2 10 Gbps
XS2000 --> USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 20 Gbps
USB 4/ Thunderbolt 10 Gbps, 20Gbps, 40 Gbps (depende de las especificaciones del huésped)


FAQ: KSD-002201-001.00

¿Fue útil?

Sí. La unidad portátil XS2000 es compatible con Mac. Sin embargo, el rendimiento de la unidad no será el anunciado porque el protocolo USB en Mac no es USB 3.2 Gen 2x2.

FAQ: KSD-002201-001.02

¿Fue útil?

La velocidad de transferencia para el SSD portátil XS2000 depende de múltiples factores. La interfaz utilizada para conectar la unidad a la computadora también puede limitar las velocidades de transferencia. La interfaz necesaria para un rendimiento óptimo es USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 (20Gbs).

Asegúrese de que se aplique lo siguiente:
  • Utilice el cable incluido con el XS2000. Otros cables podrían ser de baja calidad o especificados para bajas velocidades de transferencia de datos. Si usted decide utilizar otro cable, por favor revise las especificaciones del cable.
  • La máquina huésped debe tener un puerto USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C disponible.
  • La máquina huésped debe tener las últimas actualizaciones (por ejemplo, BIOS, controladores de chipset, controladores USB).

FAQ: KSD-002201-001.01

¿Fue útil?

Esto es común para el almacenamiento flash, ya sea SSD interno o almacenamiento USB externo, y se debe en parte a una variación en la forma de calcular el megabyte entre los fabricantes de memorias flash y los de discos duros de plato giratorio. Los fabricantes de discos duros calculan un megabyte (o 1.000x1.000 bytes) como 1.000KBs, mientras que el cálculo binario para el almacenamiento basado en flash es de 1.024KBs.

Ejemplo : Para un dispositivo de almacenamiento flash de 1TB, Windows calculará que tiene una capacidad de 931,32GB. (1,000,000,000,000÷1,024÷1,024÷1,024=931.32GB).

Además, Kingston se reserva parte de la capacidad mencionada para formatear y otras funciones, como el firmware y/o la información específica del controlador, por lo tanto, parte de la capacidad mencionada no está disponible para el almacenamiento de datos.

FAQ: KDT-010611-GEN-06

¿Fue útil?

Sí. La unidad portátil XS2000 es compatible con Mac. Sin embargo, el rendimiento de la unidad no será el anunciado porque el protocolo USB en Mac no es USB 3.2 Gen 2x2.

FAQ: KSD-002201-001.02

¿Fue útil?

No. Esta no es una unidad Thunderbolt. Es una unidad USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, con una capacidad nominal de (20Gbs) por segundo. Thunderbolt, aunque tiene una capacidad nominal de 30/40 Gbs, generalmente se maximiza a velocidades USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbs), consulte la tabla a continuación.

Compruebe las especificaciones de su dispositivo huésped.

Kingston Estándar Velocidad máxima de transferencia de datos USB
USB 1.1 12 Mbps
USB 2.0           480 Mbps
USB 3.2 Gen 1 5 Gbps
USB 3.2 Gen 2 10 Gbps
XS2000 --> USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 20 Gbps
USB 4/ Thunderbolt 10 Gbps, 20Gbps, 40 Gbps (depende de las especificaciones del huésped)


FAQ: KSD-002201-001.00

¿Fue útil?

La velocidad de transferencia para el SSD portátil XS2000 depende de múltiples factores. La interfaz utilizada para conectar la unidad a la computadora también puede limitar las velocidades de transferencia. La interfaz necesaria para un rendimiento óptimo es USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 (20Gbs).

Asegúrese de que se aplique lo siguiente:
  • Utilice el cable incluido con el XS2000. Otros cables podrían ser de baja calidad o especificados para bajas velocidades de transferencia de datos. Si usted decide utilizar otro cable, por favor revise las especificaciones del cable.
  • La máquina huésped debe tener un puerto USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C disponible.
  • La máquina huésped debe tener las últimas actualizaciones (por ejemplo, BIOS, controladores de chipset, controladores USB).

FAQ: KSD-002201-001.01

¿Fue útil?

Sí. La unidad portátil XS2000 es compatible con Mac. Sin embargo, el rendimiento de la unidad no será el anunciado porque el protocolo USB en Mac no es USB 3.2 Gen 2x2.

FAQ: KSD-002201-001.02

¿Fue útil?

The easiest way to ensure that your new SSD appears as your boot drive is to ensure that it is the only storage device connected during installation. 
If this is not possible, or if you previously cloned your old data to your new drive, confirm that the new drive appears as a boot device in the system BIOS, then select it for booting.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-03

¿Fue útil?

There are a variety of external enclosures available on the market. While Kingston aims to be compatible with all system types, occasionally, there may be an incompatibility. If you continue to have trouble with your external SSD enclosure, you may want to try a different enclosure.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-18

¿Fue útil?

First, you should confirm that the SSD is seen within the system BIOS. Enter your BIOS (usually, Del, F2, F10, or F12 key) and navigate through your storage configuration menu(s) to see if the drive is correctly identified and present. If the drive isn’t present, power off the system, check the installation and connections to confirm the drive is seated and/or connected properly. 

If the drive is present in the BIOS, you may need to initialize the disk within the operating system. Follow the steps below to initialize.

For Windows:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Windows OS.
Step 2: Press Windows + X and choose Disk Management.
Step 3: If the SSD is new and not initialized, a popup will appear saying "Initialize Disk."
Step 4: Choose between: MBR (Master Boot Record): Suitable for drives under 2TB and older systems. GPT (GUID Partition Table): Recommended for modern systems and drives larger than 2TB.
Step 5: Click OK to initialize the disk.
Step 6: Once initialized, you'll see the SSD as "Unallocated." Right-click on it and select New Simple Volume.
Step 7: Follow the on-screen prompts (keeping all defaults is Okay)  to format and assign a drive letter to the SSD.

For macOS:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Mac OS.
Step 2: Open Disk Utility (you can find it using Spotlight with Cmd + Space and then typing "Disk Utility").
Step 3: In the left pane, select your SSD.
Step 4: Click on Erase.
Step 5: Provide a name for the drive, and under Format, choose: APFS for newer Macs and SSDs. Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for older systems or HDDs.
Step 6: Click Erase. Once the process completes, the SSD will be ready for use.

For Linux:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Linux OS.
Step 2: Open a terminal.
Step 3: Enter sudo fdisk -l to list all connected drives. Identify your SSD by its size and note the device name, e.g., /dev/sdb.
Step 4: Initialize the SSD using fdisk or parted. Here's a basic guide using fdisk: Enter sudo fdisk /dev/sdb (replace /dev/sdb with your SSD's device name). Press g to create a new GPT partition table. Press n to create a new partition. Follow the prompts to specify the size and type. Press w to write the changes.
Step 5: Format the new partition on the SSD (e.g., /dev/sdb1). You can format it with the filesystem of your choice: For ext4: sudo mkfs.ext4, For ext3: sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdb1, For FAT32: sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1
Step 6: Mount the SSD: Create a mount point: sudo mkdir /mnt/myssd, Mount the SSD: sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/myssd, Remember to replace /dev/sdb1 with your SSD's partition name.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-15

¿Fue útil?

SSD firmware is the integrated software within an SSD that manages its operations, including communication with the host system, data storage and retrieval, wear leveling, and error correction. Kingston recommends that you always maintain the latest firmware.

If your SSD requires new firmware, you will receive a notification when running Kingston’s SSD Manager software, located here: www.kingston.com/ssdmanager

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-11

¿Fue útil?

When cloning to a new drive larger than the source drive, the software may not properly scale partition size. When this occurs, you might end up with unused space. To avoid this, follow our cloning instructions located here: www.kingston.com/cloning

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-04

¿Fue útil?

SSD firmware is the integrated software within an SSD that manages its operations, including communication with the host system, data storage and retrieval, wear leveling, and error correction. Kingston recommends that you always maintain the latest firmware.

If your SSD requires new firmware, you will receive a notification when running Kingston’s SSD Manager software, located here: www.kingston.com/ssdmanager

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-11

¿Fue útil?

While it may be possible to update your target drive’s firmware via USB storage enclosure, Kingston does not recommend it. Proper update procedure involves having your target SSD connected directly to the system ports (e.g., SATA or NVMe).

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-14

¿Fue útil?

Kingston does not offer DOS-based firmware updates at this time.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-12

¿Fue útil?

Unless explicitly indicated, no, an SSD update will not erase data from the drive. However, before performing any SSD firmware updates, Kingston recommends all data on the target drive be backed up before proceeding with the firmware update.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-13

¿Fue útil?

When cloning to a new drive larger than the source drive, the software may not properly scale partition size. When this occurs, you might end up with unused space. To avoid this, follow our cloning instructions located here: www.kingston.com/cloning

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-04

¿Fue útil?

First, you should confirm that the SSD is seen within the system BIOS. Enter your BIOS (usually, Del, F2, F10, or F12 key) and navigate through your storage configuration menu(s) to see if the drive is correctly identified and present. If the drive isn’t present, power off the system, check the installation and connections to confirm the drive is seated and/or connected properly. 

If the drive is present in the BIOS, you may need to initialize the disk within the operating system. Follow the steps below to initialize.

For Windows:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Windows OS.
Step 2: Press Windows + X and choose Disk Management.
Step 3: If the SSD is new and not initialized, a popup will appear saying "Initialize Disk."
Step 4: Choose between: MBR (Master Boot Record): Suitable for drives under 2TB and older systems. GPT (GUID Partition Table): Recommended for modern systems and drives larger than 2TB.
Step 5: Click OK to initialize the disk.
Step 6: Once initialized, you'll see the SSD as "Unallocated." Right-click on it and select New Simple Volume.
Step 7: Follow the on-screen prompts (keeping all defaults is Okay)  to format and assign a drive letter to the SSD.

For macOS:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Mac OS.
Step 2: Open Disk Utility (you can find it using Spotlight with Cmd + Space and then typing "Disk Utility").
Step 3: In the left pane, select your SSD.
Step 4: Click on Erase.
Step 5: Provide a name for the drive, and under Format, choose: APFS for newer Macs and SSDs. Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for older systems or HDDs.
Step 6: Click Erase. Once the process completes, the SSD will be ready for use.

For Linux:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Linux OS.
Step 2: Open a terminal.
Step 3: Enter sudo fdisk -l to list all connected drives. Identify your SSD by its size and note the device name, e.g., /dev/sdb.
Step 4: Initialize the SSD using fdisk or parted. Here's a basic guide using fdisk: Enter sudo fdisk /dev/sdb (replace /dev/sdb with your SSD's device name). Press g to create a new GPT partition table. Press n to create a new partition. Follow the prompts to specify the size and type. Press w to write the changes.
Step 5: Format the new partition on the SSD (e.g., /dev/sdb1). You can format it with the filesystem of your choice: For ext4: sudo mkfs.ext4, For ext3: sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdb1, For FAT32: sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1
Step 6: Mount the SSD: Create a mount point: sudo mkdir /mnt/myssd, Mount the SSD: sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/myssd, Remember to replace /dev/sdb1 with your SSD's partition name.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-15

¿Fue útil?

There are a variety of external enclosures available on the market. While Kingston aims to be compatible with all system types, occasionally, there may be an incompatibility. If you continue to have trouble with your external SSD enclosure, you may want to try a different enclosure.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-18

¿Fue útil?

When cloning to a new drive larger than the source drive, the software may not properly scale partition size. When this occurs, you might end up with unused space. To avoid this, follow our cloning instructions located here: www.kingston.com/cloning

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-04

¿Fue útil?

SSD firmware is the integrated software within an SSD that manages its operations, including communication with the host system, data storage and retrieval, wear leveling, and error correction. Kingston recommends that you always maintain the latest firmware.

If your SSD requires new firmware, you will receive a notification when running Kingston’s SSD Manager software, located here: www.kingston.com/ssdmanager

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-11

¿Fue útil?

The easiest way to ensure that your new SSD appears as your boot drive is to ensure that it is the only storage device connected during installation. 
If this is not possible, or if you previously cloned your old data to your new drive, confirm that the new drive appears as a boot device in the system BIOS, then select it for booting.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-03

¿Fue útil?

There are a variety of external enclosures available on the market. While Kingston aims to be compatible with all system types, occasionally, there may be an incompatibility. If you continue to have trouble with your external SSD enclosure, you may want to try a different enclosure.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-18

¿Fue útil?

First, you should confirm that the SSD is seen within the system BIOS. Enter your BIOS (usually, Del, F2, F10, or F12 key) and navigate through your storage configuration menu(s) to see if the drive is correctly identified and present. If the drive isn’t present, power off the system, check the installation and connections to confirm the drive is seated and/or connected properly. 

If the drive is present in the BIOS, you may need to initialize the disk within the operating system. Follow the steps below to initialize.

For Windows:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Windows OS.
Step 2: Press Windows + X and choose Disk Management.
Step 3: If the SSD is new and not initialized, a popup will appear saying "Initialize Disk."
Step 4: Choose between: MBR (Master Boot Record): Suitable for drives under 2TB and older systems. GPT (GUID Partition Table): Recommended for modern systems and drives larger than 2TB.
Step 5: Click OK to initialize the disk.
Step 6: Once initialized, you'll see the SSD as "Unallocated." Right-click on it and select New Simple Volume.
Step 7: Follow the on-screen prompts (keeping all defaults is Okay)  to format and assign a drive letter to the SSD.

For macOS:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Mac OS.
Step 2: Open Disk Utility (you can find it using Spotlight with Cmd + Space and then typing "Disk Utility").
Step 3: In the left pane, select your SSD.
Step 4: Click on Erase.
Step 5: Provide a name for the drive, and under Format, choose: APFS for newer Macs and SSDs. Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for older systems or HDDs.
Step 6: Click Erase. Once the process completes, the SSD will be ready for use.

For Linux:
Step 1: Confirm the drive is properly attached, and power on the system, then boot into Linux OS.
Step 2: Open a terminal.
Step 3: Enter sudo fdisk -l to list all connected drives. Identify your SSD by its size and note the device name, e.g., /dev/sdb.
Step 4: Initialize the SSD using fdisk or parted. Here's a basic guide using fdisk: Enter sudo fdisk /dev/sdb (replace /dev/sdb with your SSD's device name). Press g to create a new GPT partition table. Press n to create a new partition. Follow the prompts to specify the size and type. Press w to write the changes.
Step 5: Format the new partition on the SSD (e.g., /dev/sdb1). You can format it with the filesystem of your choice: For ext4: sudo mkfs.ext4, For ext3: sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdb1, For FAT32: sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1
Step 6: Mount the SSD: Create a mount point: sudo mkdir /mnt/myssd, Mount the SSD: sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/myssd, Remember to replace /dev/sdb1 with your SSD's partition name.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-15

¿Fue útil?

While it may be possible to update your target drive’s firmware via USB storage enclosure, Kingston does not recommend it. Proper update procedure involves having your target SSD connected directly to the system ports (e.g., SATA or NVMe).

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-14

¿Fue útil?

Unless explicitly indicated, no, an SSD update will not erase data from the drive. However, before performing any SSD firmware updates, Kingston recommends all data on the target drive be backed up before proceeding with the firmware update.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-13

¿Fue útil?

Kingston does not offer DOS-based firmware updates at this time.

FAQ: KSD-012010-001-12

¿Fue útil?

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