Soldato
- Joined
- 2 Jan 2012
- Posts
- 12,453
- Location
- UK.
Running 4 x SSD's, 2 NVME's for games and 2 SSD's for important data. Also 2 x spinners for movies and TV shows. Couldn't imagine just relying on drive.
Yeah, you could say it's '******* ridiculous'Ribbed, for her pleasure?![]()
- See what I did there... I'll get my coat!
Win win!

I take it you've got sigs turned off for some reason despite having yours enabled? PCI-E 4.0 NVME, ridiculous lifespan, fast asf, B550M motherboard.what motherboard do you have there? is the drive PCIE 5.0?? @keef247
you have MSI MAG B550M Mortar Max Wifi?
| LG Ultra Gear 32GN600-B 165Hz 1440P | Corsair Ironclaw RGB Wireless |
| MSI MAG B550M Mortar Max Wifi | 32GB 3600mhz CAS16 Corsair LPX |
| 5700X | Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120SE | Asus Dual RTX 4070 |
| 2TB Corsair MP600 PRO XT | NZXT C850 850W | Antec NX410 |
I take it you've got sigs turned off for some reason despite having yours enabled? PCI-E 4.0 NVME, ridiculous lifespan, fast asf, B550M motherboard.
Ah ok, we should administer suspensions for those who don't update itno but over time I've learned that not everyone keeps then up to date.
With such a massive heatsink i just assumed it would be PCIe5.0



and the lifespan of the card is ridiculous, and well proven. Very hard to beat.
Wasting one of the very limited M.2 slots for tiny OS drive has absolute zero sense.
Mid range boards have usually two M.2 slots."Very limited"? These days, a midrange motherboard will likely have more M.2 than you will ever need unless you've got specialist needs.
Mid range boards have usually two M.2 slots.
Looking through OCUK's selection of Intel motherboards, the only midrange boards I can see with 2x M.2 are smaller footprint boards. 4x is normal, some have 3x or 5x. Even most of the budget end boards have more than 2. The AMD motherboards seem to have slightly lower numbers on average but even then most midrange boards have 4x.
Just because a motherboard has NVMe slots doesn't mean you can use them all, most suffer with shared PCI lanes, and not everyone wants to spend hundreds on a motherboard to maximize storage.
You usually can use them all, just that they may not operate at full speed
There is all sorts of shenanigans that goes on, boards get advertised as pcie5 but then that only applies to one Nvme slot and it shares lanes
Personally, I grade things - so will happily spend more for the boot drive to get faster performance, but don't need so much size.
Another for games, which I'm now putting on a chunky 4TB NVME - but don't need blazing fast speeds.
And then finally anything else, like MP3s, random installers etc can get chucked on a SATA3 SSD to free up space.
Maybe in a few years NVME drives will be cheap enough that I can abandon SATA altogether, but I expect I'll be running one for a few more years.