The SSD module in a 2015 MacBook Pro uses an Apple-proprietary "12+16-pin" connector, which is different from the normal standard m2 connector used on Windows PC computers. There is a market for adaptors that allow the fitting of generic m2 blades into a Mac's 12+16 socket; but I suspect that adaptors going the other way will be rare.
MacBook Air 13" early 2014 (MacBookAir6,2) The 2015-2017 MBA models either shipped with 2x or 4x lanes PCIe 2.0 AHCI SSD (speed ~700 to ~1500MB/s). They support up to 4TB NVMe SSD if their BootRom is at least MBA71. 0171.B00 and will make them run at PCIe 2.0 speed with up to 4x lanes. They do support natively hibernation on NVMe SSD : MacBookMacBook Air (11-inch, Early 2015) MacBook Air (13-inch, Early 2014) MacBook Air (11-inch, Early 2014) macOS Catalina is compatible with these computers. IndiaThis SSD uses an Apple proprietary 12+16 pin connector boasting a PCIe 2.0 x4 interface with NVMe support. While the connector is the same found in a variety of other Apple devices, this SSD is only compatible with the MacBook Air 11" with Early 2015 release. This is generally the Blade Type PCI-e SSD as seen in the links above. For older MacBook Pros it may be a Sata 2.5" SSD, For the newest MBPs its simply soldered to the motherboard so no type. Unlike RAM, it does not get more specific, as for those any blade-type PCI-e SSD will generally fit. ( 0) Phil0124. Level 10. 2015 MacBook Air: SSD, Trackpad, Battery, compatible SSD. Newer, MacBook-compatible SSDs now available can provide the same speed as the one that came with your Mac – but far more storage 13" Mid-2012 MacBook Pro Won't Recognize SSD Except in Disk Utility Hi! To help with troubleshooting a family member's laptop, I just swapped a known-good 500-GB Crucial SSD from my 13" mid-2012 MacBook Pro (let's call that A) into theirs (let's call that one B; I put the 500-GB HDD from B into A, the one I'm using now) and its new home (B) won't recognize it.
Kapton tape was only necessary with the early versions of the short, green adapter. The adapter from your link looks like the new revision that doesn't need tape. Based on your speed tests, the drive looks to be working fine. The 2017 MacBook Air has PCI-e 2.0 x 4 lanes while the 2015 Pro has PCI-e 3.0 x 4 lanes.
MacBook models from early 2015 or later; MacBook Air models from mid-2012 or later; MacBook Pro models from mid-2012 or later; Mac mini models from late 2012 or later; iMac models from late 2012