Zilkee NVMe & M.2 SSD Recovery Enclosure — Read Any Modern Laptop SSD (USB-C & USB-A, 10 Gbps)
Pulled an SSD out of a newer laptop and your Zilkee converter wouldn't connect to it? This is the tool you need.
Modern laptops use a small, gum-stick-shaped drive called an M.2 SSD, and it needs a different connector than older hard drives. The good news: your drive is almost certainly fine. You just need the right adapter to read it.
Slide your M.2 SSD into the Zilkee enclosure, close the lid, and plug it into your computer with the included cable. Your drive shows up like any external drive, and you can copy your files off. No tools, no screws, no technical setup.
Works with both kinds of M.2 SSD — the faster NVMe drives and the older SATA (NGFF) drives — so you don't have to know which one you have. It detects the right type automatically. Connects to any computer with a USB-C or USB-A port (the included cable does both), on Windows or Mac.
Is this the right tool for me?
You need this if your drive looks like a small stick of gum — a thin circuit board a couple of inches long, with a notched gold connector on one end. That's an M.2 SSD, standard in most laptops made after roughly 2016.
You do NOT need this if your drive is a flat rectangle the size of a deck of cards (2.5") or a heavier brick (3.5") with a wide two-piece connector. That's a SATA or IDE drive — your original Zilkee Ultra Recovery Converter already handles those.
Not sure which one you have? Send us a photo and we'll tell you in one reply.
Key features
- Reads both NVMe and SATA M.2 drives. It auto-detects the drive type — one enclosure for both. No switch to flip, no separate model to buy.
- Up to 10 Gbps transfer (USB 3.2 Gen 2). A full recovery of family photos and documents moves in minutes, not hours, on a 10 Gbps-capable port. Backward-compatible with USB 3.0 (5 Gbps) and USB 2.0 (480 Mbps) ports — it simply runs at that port's speed.
- Tool-free, plug-and-play. Open the lid, set the drive in, press it down, close the lid. No screwdriver. The thermal pad and retaining plug are pre-installed.
- USB-C and USB-A in one cable. The included cable has a combo connector, so it works whether your computer is new (USB-C) or older (USB-A). Nothing extra to buy.
- Aluminum body that runs cool. The all-metal shell pulls heat away from the drive during long transfers and is vented on both sides, so the enclosure stays safe to handle.
- Fits all standard M.2 lengths. Supports 2242, 2260, and 2280 sticks — the three common sizes.
- Windows, Mac, and Linux. No drivers and no software to install for basic file access. Plug it in and the drive mounts like any external disk.
Specifications
| Compatible drives | M.2 NVMe (PCIe) SSDs and M.2 SATA (NGFF) SSDs |
| M.2 key types | NVMe: M-Key, B+M Key · SATA: B+M Key |
| Supported lengths | 2242 / 2260 / 2280 |
| Dimensions | 114.5 × 35 × 35 mm (approx., hand-measured) |
| Host interface | USB 3.2 Gen 2, Type-C connector |
| Included cable | USB-C to USB-C + USB-A combo (2-in-1 host end) |
| Max transfer rate | Up to 10 Gbps (NVMe mode); up to 6 Gbps (SATA mode) |
| Backward compatibility | USB 3.0 (5 Gbps), USB 2.0 (480 Mbps) |
| Enclosure material | Aluminum alloy, dual-side ventilation |
| Installation | Tool-free flip-cover; pre-installed thermal pad |
| Power | Bus-powered over USB (no external adapter) |
| Operating systems | Windows, macOS, Linux |
| Status indicator | Power / activity LED |
| Sleep function | Auto-sleep when idle to reduce heat and extend drive life |
What's in the box
- 1× Zilkee NVMe & M.2 SSD Recovery Enclosure
- 1× USB-C to USB-C / USB-A combo cable
- 1× Thermal pad
- 1× Rubber retaining plug (pre-installed)
- 1× Quick-start guide
Setup in 3 steps
- Open the enclosure. Flip back the lid. Set your M.2 SSD into the slot at a slight angle, lining up the notch with the connector, then press it flat. The pre-installed rubber plug holds it in place — no screw needed.
- Close it up. Peel the film off the thermal pad, lay the pad on the drive, and flip the lid closed until it clicks.
- Plug in and copy your files. Connect the cable to the enclosure and to your computer. Your drive appears like any external drive. Open it and copy your files to a safe folder.
First-time setup note (for brand-new, blank drives only)
If the drive is brand new and has never been used, your computer may not show it until you initialize it. You can skip this entirely if you're recovering files from a drive that was already in use — those show up on their own.
To initialize a blank drive: open Disk Management (Windows) or Disk Utility (Mac), find the new disk, and format it. Use exFAT if you want the drive to work on both Windows and Mac, or NTFS for Windows-only.
⚠️ Only do this for a blank drive. Never format or initialize a drive you're trying to recover files from — it erases data.
Care & safety
- Don't unplug the enclosure mid-transfer — eject it first, the same way you'd safely remove a USB stick.
- Back up anything important before reformatting a drive.
- The aluminum body gets warm during long transfers. That's normal and by design — it's pulling heat off the drive. It's safe to touch.
- Avoid drops, hard knocks, and crushing.
FAQ
Will this read the M.2 drive from my laptop?
If your laptop's drive is an M.2 stick — NVMe or SATA — yes. That covers most laptops made since about 2016. If you're unsure, send a photo and we'll confirm.
Does it work on a Mac?
Yes, for reading files off the drive. Plug it into a Mac's USB-C port and the drive mounts in Finder. (Note: the Zilkee recovery Wizard software is Windows-only, but you don't need it for straightforward file copying.)
My computer doesn't show the drive. What's wrong?
First, make sure the drive is an M.2 SSD and seated fully. If it's a previously-used drive and still doesn't appear, it may be a drive-health issue — contact support. If it's a brand-new blank drive, see the initialization note above.
Does it need a power adapter?
No. It powers over the USB cable.
What's the difference between this and my Ultra Recovery Converter?
The Ultra Recovery Converter connects older SATA and IDE hard drives — the flat rectangles and heavier bricks. This enclosure connects M.2 SSDs — the small gum-stick drives in modern laptops. Different drive shape, different tool.






