chuck3400 wrote:
I can't connect the drive directly to my Mac. I don't have a thunderbolt 2 thunderbolt cable.
WAIT ... why do you need anything having to do with Thunderbolt 2? The oldest MacBook Air 13" models that can run Sequoia came with Thunderbolt 3. You can connect directly between your SSD and that MacBook Air with a USB-C cable which should support some ~ Gb/s.
Anyhow, I pulled out an old hub & ran SuperDuper. SD finished but disk did not eject. So I did it manually. No error message. Continued on with email, Safari, etc. without issues. This has happened without error before with various hubs before I got the docking station.
However "disc not ejected properly" did pop up frequently with several hubs. (which is why I got the Baseus in the first place).
I would dispose of the old hubs or cables that don't seem to work right. They may be obsolete or incompatible with a modern MacOS.
That Baseus hub is indeed "frequently returned," which might not speak well to its build quality. Also, there is a note that some of its advertised capabilities don't work on Macs. I would suggest a better choice would be a hub from OWC or Pluggable that are advertised for and known to work well with Macs.
By the way, why are you on MacOS 15.6? Many bugs have been fixed with subsequent versions and the latest version is 15.7.2.
So, if I can't find a solution maybe I'll just replicate the SD backup infrequently and rely mostly on Time Machine.
You should be doing both Time Machine and SD backups frequently without any issues. It is good practice to have different types of backups and to do them often. You should be using only modern high quality equipment (drives, cables, docks) that works reliably. I would not keep a drawer with old questionable cables and hubs and try reusing them.
You mentioned having a history of improper drive ejection. That is one reason I suggested posting the Etrecheck report, there may be clues in there for the root cause(s). The drive itself might be faulty, let alone cables or old hubs. If so, your backups might be at risk or could be corrupted. The worst time to find that out is when something happens and you really need them. Improper drive ejections can easily corrupt the data on those drives, but may also be indicative of a problem with the Mac itself. What year/model is your Mac?